The computer is capable of beaming people wherever in perfectly ideal conditions, at least. In order to preserve drama, it seems like every nine seconds theyāre encountering some random magical rocks in terrain, a negative space wedgie, equipment failure, battle damage, etc., etc., thatās preventing the transporter from Just Working. Since otherwise weād have to assume the Enterprise crew are blisteringly idiotic for just not using the transporter to Deus Ex Machina themselves out of whatever the danger is this week as a first resort every single time. ("The Breen dropship has drilled through the hull and boarding parties are on decks 7, 8, and 9! Letās all stand around in a foggy hallway and pew-pew ineffectually at each other rather than just beaming the fuckers out into space!)
I theorize that an experienced transporter operator is required to beam through interference, radiation, through shields, at warp speed, or whatever other previously described limitation of the transporters needs to be overcome to make the plot work today. So itās not just sliding the sliders ā Itās how you slide the sliders. Otherwise you might get get yourself Barclayāedā¦
I mean, Iāve seen the Computer beam them up in most sub-optimal conditions. Usually, on away missions, using the shuttle. And I, of course, understand that the real answer is ābecause the plot demands itā. But it still annoys me a bit.
If the transporter really worked they would just transport people out of caves all the time. Saying they canāt do that makes zero sense that rocks would block a subspace transmission. Itās not going through the rocks, itās circumventing them through another dimension.
They try to hand wave it away by saying that they canāt get a sensor lock, but wouldnāt you in that case just lock onto the entire interior of the cave, and beam all of it to the surface. Youāll probably transport a lot of useless boulders as well but who cares. Itās not like you have a weight capacity.
Maybe they tried that but discovered a small problem with beaming the away party plus 2000 tons of unsupported rock above their heads.
The computer can do all of that, including managing shields, itās just slower, and has safety checks installed to prevent itself from unpowering or blacking out modules.
Human operators have a āchaos factorā and can do stupid things like diverting power from shields (down to 1%) to recharge the phaser banks just a bit faster, in-between enemy volleys.
At least, thatās what we want to tell ourselves to ensure that thereās still jobs aboard fully autonomous luxury gay communist spacefaring vessels ;)