Ok, so they decided in their story that because of futuristic building and launching practises, its more efficient to build the ship on the ground. I don't see how that's more of a leap than saying "luckily, for story purposes, an alien can mate with a human". Neither are particularly plausible, I grant you, but as you say, this is fiction, I don't see why one is fine and the other is a huge mistake.
And this is the problem; if you had ANY understanding of what space is - and is not - you would understand that it is literally impossible for a ground construction and launch to be more efficient; as a part of that, safer.
In fact, all those futuristic building capabilities, makes the gap between building in space and building on ground, only BIGGER when it comes to efficiency and safety; not smaller, let alone that ground-construction would surpass space construction.
It will never happen.
The trekkies that work at NASA's assumptions?
This stuff is extrapolation from NASA, and from Brit Intplanetarsy Society, building in orbit. NASA's guy was the tech advisor (a serious contributor) on TMP.
Building on the ground flies in the face of ...
If anyone bitches about the ship being built on the ground again I'll fucking well eat my own chin in despair. See if I don't.
Flash forward a few months... news source:
"The premiere of the much anticipated Star Trek reboot starring Chris Pine as Captain Kirk and Zachary Quinto, Sylar from recently cancelled Heroes, hit movie screens Friday night. Although film critics hailed the drama and surprisingly intricate character driven performances and giving fans a dose of exhilarating Star Trek since 2004 laced with breaktaking visuals and non stop action, the film was universally panned as it depicted the highly ridiculous aspect of the Enterprise's construction... on the ground. Both hardcore fans and casual viewers alike were unable to look over this one small detail of the film. Star Trek is expected to screen for another week in theatres, when it will go straight to home video and purchase price from a discount bin."
It's not a dramatic moment, it's "What the hell is that shit!? This is ridiculous! Laughing now, totally out of the movie, this is horrible." moment.
I'm pretty sure that backs up the second half of my post
...again, you're talking about clips. CLIPS! Something that's been drawn to gathering (shock and horror) a GENERAL audience as well as the inner clique of nerds who'll go regardless.Star Trek used to be something MORE than some cheap shit, who cares about anything series. It was based heavily in science; it wrote things in such a matter that it was something that it fit with technology, logic and science.
No more, it seems, Trek is now Trek Wars; all for the visual, to hell with any intelligence or logic, toss it out the window.
A film maker should be able to create a dramatic moment, without having to toss all sense of logic and intelligence on the garbage heap.
You bypassed the story I mentioned and headed straight for science. Something which we haven't seen anything of, aside from story points no more ridicukous or unscientific than anything seen in TOS. Which to be fair is expected, things age and date and you can often tell the age of a sci fi by the science theory behind it. Just as much as you can tell by the set design, or the props.
Ok, so they decided in their story that because of futuristic building and launching practises, its more efficient to build the ship on the ground. I don't see how that's more of a leap than saying "luckily, for story purposes, an alien can mate with a human". Neither are particularly plausible, I grant you, but as you say, this is fiction, I don't see why one is fine and the other is a huge mistake.
And this is the problem; if you had ANY understanding of what space is - and is not - you would understand that it is literally impossible for a ground construction and launch to be more efficient; as a part of that, safer.
In fact, all those futuristic building capabilities, makes the gap between building in space and building on ground, only BIGGER when it comes to efficiency and safety; not smaller, let alone that ground-construction would surpass space construction.
It will never happen.
I'll thank you not to assume that just because I don't care about this stuff that I do not know about it. I did, in fact, express that view in terms of serving the story, not what I find more believeable nor your twisted sense of what's appropriate and what isn't.
If anyone bitches about the ship being built on the ground again I'll fucking well eat my own chin in despair. See if I don't.
Flash forward a few months... news source:
"The premiere of the much anticipated Star Trek reboot starring Chris Pine as Captain Kirk and Zachary Quinto, Sylar from recently cancelled Heroes, hit movie screens Friday night. Although film critics hailed the drama and surprisingly intricate character driven performances and giving fans a dose of exhilarating Star Trek since 2004 laced with breaktaking visuals and non stop action, the film was universally panned as it depicted the highly ridiculous aspect of the Enterprise's construction... on the ground. Both hardcore fans and casual viewers alike were unable to look over this one small detail of the film. Star Trek is expected to screen for another week in theatres, when it will go straight to home video and purchase price from a discount bin."
When that scene comes up, I'm going to boo and throw Raisinets at the screen.
Look, in Trek's world, the Enterprise is one of the SMALLER things being built for outer space. There are space stations up there that must be two miles or more across. Now, I would roll my eyes and say, "Fail," at the prospect of those being built (entirely) on the ground.
So, maybe it's an issue of scale. Maybe it's easier or more efficient economically to build a ship the size of the Enterprise on the ground and ferry it up into space somehow. I mean I can buy that. That explanation (rationalization) works for me, at least.
It would probably be prudent for theatre owners to install transparent raisinet barriers over their screens.
In "Star Trek's" time, human beings have complete control over the effects of mass and inertia. They also have unlimited energy sources.
If either of those things aren't true, Trek's starflight technology can not work as depicted.
So, they can do pretty much anything they like. Case closed.
Which is the reason why building in space makes it so incredibly much more safer and efficient than building it on the ground.
Since where the Enterprise was constructed has never been a part of the onscreen continuity, that's the least of considerations.
It's entertaining.Why you guys still bother arguing with 3DMaster about the "ship built on the ground" thing or any other thing for that matter, I'll never know...
Stuff's grandfathered in, which is cool - basically, if it was good enough conceptually for TOS I'm fine with it. That doesn't mean that there's a reason to get bent out of shape when something's changed or improved, though.
Which is the reason why building in space makes it so incredibly much more safer and efficient than building it on the ground.
How do you figure that???
Makes no difference at all, actually. They can build it on Earth and lift it into space, build it in space and land it - whatever they want.
So where they build it is a matter of convenience and might just as well be dictated by non-engineering considerations altogether.
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