Papermodels are a craft rather than an art but a papermodel designer
still needs to consider the same problems faced by other artists/
craftsmen: should one focus on form or function - in other words,
should it focus on looking good or being practical? If you wanted a
prop of the Next Generation Tricorder you couldn't go past the
attention to detail of the one sold by Master Replicas<http://
www.masterreplicas.com/product.asp?pid=197>. However technology that
does the same work as the Tricorder has been developed by Vital
Technologies<http://www.stim.com/Stim-x/0996September/Sparky/
tricorder.html>, Raman Systems<http://ramansystems.com/content/view/
39/141/> and even the New Zealand firm ARANZ Medical<http://
www.aranzmedical.com/mobile.htm>, none of which look remotely like the
canon prop!

I was in the same dilema when looking for a papermodel project for
this year's <http://www.twerponline.net/12days2008/>Twelve Trek Days
of Christmas. Last year we did a calendar and I like the idea of
something practical like that however I wanted it to have something to
do with papermodels this year. A pepermodel calendar? Close but too
easy. I thought about doing a datebook (too much like a fanzine and
you'll be getting fed up of my writing by now!) or a CD jewel case
calendar (a good project but not really a papermodel is it?).

I decided to finally bring together some ideas I have had percolating
through what I laughingly call a brain, for some time. In the past
I've tried my hand at science education for primary schoolers<http://
www.geocities.com/andertonbargo/bronzewing/index.html> and agonised
over a papermodel of a PADD. I've often thought that it would be cool
to handout science notes in a PADD but never taken it beyond following
the great work in paper information technology being done by the
"paper PDA" community<http://www.diyplanner.com/>.

So here's The Paper PADD Mk 01 for the Starfleet Cadet Academy, Tech
Level: 2009. It stands to reason that, even with all the wizz-bang
technology they will have in the 24th century, kids will still want to
make things and besides, understanding is something that needs to be
experienced rather than force-fed. It's my belief that primary
schoolers will still be taught to use the traditional media of pencil,
pen and paper, alongside more high technology resources, so that the
ancient skills of writing and crafts - and their necessary hand/eye
coordination - will not be lost.

At the moment it is at the Beta testing stage and I have included
eight notepad drawing and text pages but this will be updated soon
with a 2009 Star Trek papermodel calendar. The two pdfs needed to
print out the cover (print in colour, single-sided) and the insert
sheets (colour, double sided) can be found on Scribd HERE<http://
www.scribd.com/doc/11341006/PaperPADD011> and HERE<http://
www.scribd.com/doc/11342918/PaperPADD-Sheets-011>. I'd like feedback
from builders on either the Star Trek Papermodel Yahoo Group<http://
groups.yahoo.com/group/StarTrekPaperModels>, the Okudagrams.com
forum<http://www.joseralat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1470> or the
DIYPlanner forum<http://www.diyplanner.com/node/6377>.

Cheers

Kirok of L'Stok
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