This is the Phoenix Conn Station Circa 2011. This station was built in Revolution, and ran on a Macintosh Laptop (mid 2008). This station was programmed by Alex Anderson.
This is the Phoenix 1st Officer Station Circa 2011. This station was built in Revolution, and ran on a Macintosh Laptop (mid 2008). This station was programmed by Alex Anderson.
This is the Phoenix Engineering Station Circa 2011. This station was built in Revolution, and ran on a Macintosh Laptop (mid 2008). This station was programmed by Alex Anderson.
This is the Phoenix Operations Station Circa 2011. This station was built in Revolution, and ran on a Macintosh Laptop (mid 2008). This station was programmed by Alex Anderson.
This is the Phoenix Tactical Station Circa 2011. This station was built in Revolution, and ran on a Macintosh Laptop (mid 2008). This station was programmed by Alex Anderson.
This is the Phoenix Core Controls Circa 2011. The Core and 2nd Chair controls were built in Revolution, and ran on macintosh computers. These stations were programmed by Alex Anderson.
This video documents a staff training session on the operation and functions of the Atlantis simulator's communications long-range station. The training covers sending and receiving long-distance messages, coordinating with the Colonial Command (Coalcom), and maintaining regular communication during missions. It provides step-by-step instructions for operating the messaging interface, monitoring incoming messages, and ensuring consistent communication to avoid mission complications.
This video provides a detailed walkthrough of the communications telephone station aboard a ship. It demonstrates how the officer in charge manages both internal and external calls, including connecting to main speakers, making ship-wide announcements and contacting personnel on specific rooms or decks. The video also explains technical aspects such as amplitude, frequency, and phase settings for external communications, as well as the use of intercom features for phone conversations within the ship.
This training video explains how to operate the second-chair computer used by supervisors in the control room during missions. It walks through each interface section, including messaging with damage control, medical, and security teams, updating damaged systems, sending scan responses, and managing communications. The instructor emphasizes professionalism, clear spelling, use of all caps, and avoiding punctuation or emoticons to prevent system errors and maintain a military tone. The video also covers creating “second stories” to keep crew members engaged without distracting from the main mission. Additional tools such as parts transfers, probe commands, long-range messaging, and thruster monitoring are explained so supervisors can support the crew effectively and relay critical information to the flight director.
This training video walks viewers through how to correctly create and edit damage reports on the Atlantis bridge computer system. It demonstrates how to access the programming folders, duplicate an existing report, and rename it properly so the system can recognize it. The trainer emphasizes the importance of accurate spelling, simple yet engaging language, and ensuring that each step in the report corresponds to an action that a station can actually perform. The video also explains how to design clear, logical repair steps, including creating damage-control teams and verifying station capabilities before assigning tasks. Finally, it offers general tips for consistency, readability, and using existing reports as models to produce professional, functional damage reports.