How is that a plot glitch? Isn't that just a matter of in-world tech?
I think a lot of people discount the value of in-world tech in science
fiction. I get annoyed sometimes with basic science fails such as the behavior and characteristics of black holes and relativity mentioned early in the thread. But a great many of the criticisms from later in the thread are easily handwaved away by tech.
In Star Wars, for example, books in the universe explain that the ships make no sound in space. The sound in the movies comes from the computers within each ship that detect the other ships and generate the sounds. A unique sound for each kind of ship coming from speakers surrounding the cockpit - this allows the pilot to have better situational awareness. I know it sounds silly, but it is also an easy way to explain away one of the more basically apparent science mistakes in that series.
I get most annoyed with movies that are presented as hard SF, which then make a whole lot of science errors - the 2013 film
Gravity, for example, or
Interstellar which is kind of hard science-fictiony with its presentation of the black hole and mention of time-dilation effects, but then takes a whole of liberties with said time dilation. That can be forgiven (in my opinion) due to the use of an actual great big pipe organ for the soundtrack (
No Time for Caution, film version - listen to it loud!). The nitrogen-based crop blight in Interstellar also seemed unbelievable, as did the baseball field and low-density housing in the
O'Neill cylinder near the end (they had to evacuate everyone on the entire planet, but they had room for baseball fields and suburban type houses?)
The amount of energy used by the transporters in Star Trek always bothered me, so I made up my own fan theory about that. In my theory, they work at the element, not nuclear, level. They destructively scan things, then beam the information somewhere, then reassemble it from elements already in the target environment. This explains the preference for beaming to or from transporter pads, as those are equipped to make sure that all uncommon trace elements are provided and available. The idea of converting all the mass to energy and then reconverting that much energy back into mass always seemed a bit hinky to me.