Diskovery ^Cby Jay Wilbur Whenever I watch Star Trek, both the original and The Next Generation, I always get a bit jealous over all the neat toys they get to play with. Of course the warp drive and transporter technology are great, I get all worked up about the items I think might really exist and have an application I can use now. Back in the original series they had those great communicators and pen-and-paper based computers. In ST-TNG they've done away with the clamshell communicators and gone with a lapel pin deal. All of these items are either available or being worked on today. The good old clamshell communicator from the original ST has found its way into telephone service--cellular telephone service that is. Some of the most sophisticated, lightest and most compact of the new cellular phones use ST's clamshell design. Pen based computers are like electronic clipboards. You write on them and the computer turns that information into computer data. Star Trek fans have seen these electronic clipboards many times. Every time Yeoman Rand handed Captain Kirk a document that needed signing, it was on a pen based computer. Today you can buy pen based computers from over a dozen different manufactureres. It seems that Star Trek's glimpse of the future was more like a crystal ball technology forecast. ST-TNG is no different in it's technology forecasting. As any Trekker worth his weight in dilithium can tell you, the clamshell communicator is gone. The new crew of the Enterprise wear these great little lapel pins that maintains contact with the ships computer. The user need only tap his pin to locate another crew member or initiate a session with the ship's computer. This little device is GREAT! This little device is also reality at a special place here on Earth--Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). PARC is a place that defines the next steps in computer technology years before we users get to play with it. In the late seventies and early eighties the gang at PARC were working on a point-and-shoot mouse-based interface. Steve Jobs saw that point-and-shoot interface on a visit to PARC and the seed for the Macintosh interface was planted. It's apparent the PARC helps to develop tomorrow's technology today. At PARC they have a device called The Active Badge (originally developed by Olivetti Cambridge research laboratory) that clips onto your shirt, much like those security ID badges currently worn by employees of large companies. The Active Badge contains a small microprocessor and an infrared transmitter along with batteries to make it all run. By placing infrared receivers connected to the office computers in each room, the wearer's calls can automatically follow him, doors can automatically open and computer workstations can set themselves to the user's preference without any user intervention. While the size and application of PARC's Active Badge and ST-TNG's lapel pin differ, it's easy to see that it's on its way to being one and the same. Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek and Star Trek-The Next Generation have not only given us a glimpse of a future filled with hope and adventure, but he's also given us a glimpse of where technology is headed. I often wonder if he knew just how right he was about the impressive devices he created as props for the show? ^R-J