
Discovering The Orville
The Orville’s Tom Costantino is today’s guest… proving we’re more than just Star Trek at A Trekzone Conversation.
The Orville’s Tom Costantino is today’s guest… proving we’re more than just Star Trek at A Trekzone Conversation.
Because it’s kinda like Star Trek, and there’s a tonne of Trek vets on the show – The Orville is coming to Trekzone!
The first two Short Treks have been released in the US, and now they’ve been reviewed by Australia’s first Star Trek fan site!
Pixomondo’s VFX guru Nhat Phong Tran sat down for a chat about working on Seth Macfarlane’s hit FOX show…
Joining Discovery and The Animated Adventures on the new TREKZONE.org site is all seventy nine episodes of The Original Series. It took over a week and a lot of hours
In an effort to streamline workflows and integrate the one brand on-line, I’ve decided to move the entire TREKZONE.org catalogue over to this site – and rename ‘1701NEWS’ back to
I had every intention of bringing you something new in the episode database on daily basis for the next four hundred days, but as I sat down this morning to
2018 marks fifteen years since this website began and it’s time to expand on the content I’m supplying. You’re going to start seeing a lot of fresh content, as well
Star Trek Discovery is nine episodes old now, and for the first time in our history, the Trek Geeks and The Trekzone Spotlight have had fresh Trek to talk about.
The Schrödinger impact basin is an area of the moon that contains two gigantic canyons – that are definitely there whether you look at it or not – and international researchers say they might have found out how these huge valleys were formed.
Dust on the moon could one day be used to build solar panels, according to researchers who say this could allow astronauts to access power on the moon without carting heavy equipment from Earth.
They say music is the universal language of humankind, but some stars in our galaxy exhibit their own rhythm, offering fresh clues into how they and our galaxy evolved over time.
Miso made in space has a nuttier, more roasted flavour than miso made on solid ground, according to international researchers, who sent a small container of fermenting soybeans and salt, the ingredients for the traditional Japanese condiment, to the International Space Station.
A QUT cosmologist is part of the international research team that’s published an analysis that shines new light on dark energy and suggests the standard model of how the universe works may need an update.
We’re back for the mid-2025 season of Talkin’ Science, lets get the headlines across the past week…
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The Schrödinger impact basin is an area of the moon that contains two gigantic canyons – that are definitely there whether you look at it or not – and international researchers say they might have found out how these huge valleys were formed.
Dust on the moon could one day be used to build solar panels, according to researchers who say this could allow astronauts to access power on the moon without carting heavy equipment from Earth.
They say music is the universal language of humankind, but some stars in our galaxy exhibit their own rhythm, offering fresh clues into how they and our galaxy evolved over time.
Miso made in space has a nuttier, more roasted flavour than miso made on solid ground, according to international researchers, who sent a small container of fermenting soybeans and salt, the ingredients for the traditional Japanese condiment, to the International Space Station.
A QUT cosmologist is part of the international research team that’s published an analysis that shines new light on dark energy and suggests the standard model of how the universe works may need an update.
We’re back for the mid-2025 season of Talkin’ Science, lets get the headlines across the past week…
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The views and opinions expressed by guests on our podcasts are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Trekzone Media or its employees.