Are you trying to make it hard to have a nice, pleasant, opinionated yet salt-free discussion? Because you're succeeding.
Madman. Look at your behavior. You came into this thread, flatly denied that technology we already had was possible, told people their ideas were impossible without a speck of research (hell, I agreed within before I did the two minutes to consult google), called everyone idiots for not specifying a trivial detail on the space station not even relevant to the game, and have basically gone around offering people salt shakers.
Sure, I'd love to have a decent discussion on the merits of various designs, but we're not discussing the merits of various designs, you're coming in and telling everyone they're wrong and that they need to do it your way. Everyone is willing to vote for your space station, if you're willing to accept a small compromise on your design. The fact that you're throwing this much of a tantrum over not having exactly your way is silly.
You ignored the part of the argument where I said that yes, the pieces were to be built on the ground, but not at the level the ISS is (entire sections).
I'm not ignoring that, I'm including it in the category of insane when our existing methods are superior. Essentially, it goes like this: If you're suggesting no change from our existing construction protocols, why are you bothering to mention it, and if you're specifying we use more ground based construction that we do for our existing designs- it's a waste of energy.
If you think that a man in a space suit can do delicate electronics work, you, sir, have no future. You have to build everything with integrated electronics or electronics/wiring of any essential kind on the ground. Essential, of course, refers to life support, required before you can do delicate electronic work on the inside with your hands. Most of any space structure must be built either on the ground or in an established structure.
This first sentence, legitimately, makes me laugh. Seriously? I'm beginning to think I've misjudged and you're writing parody. We. Print. Pefectly. Integrated. Electronics. The circuit is the panel, the panel is the circuit. Is there come precision work in connecting it to the mechanical hardware? Probably. Is there precision work that is not clearly already handled by existing techniques already used in orbit? No. We have the tech to make every part of this station in sections, and we have the tech to make it BEST in sections. Please, if you're not just trolling for the hell of it, I implore you read our initial attempt. It was built much like what you were originally specifying, and its primary failure was because we do NOT have the precision necessary to create large sections.
"votes speak for themselves", eh? Well, think about this before you toss more logical fallacies out there:
You are aware that logical fallacy is a very specific term? Please, for my own edification, would you mind pointing the ones I've made out so that I may better myself by your shining example?
Now, to the last comment, there's a big difference. In addition, the Illiad is a terrible example for your point, let me help you. The IMW was designed to be obsolete. The Illiad was designed to be our light ship for a good while. We made the IMW because it was literally our first construction in the field, and slipshod gave us something we could deploy, because we NEEDED something to deploy. We have experience in small scale construction, and this IS our first large scale construction, you're not wrong there, but there's no pressure for this to be immediately deployed at efficacy. We do not need to design this to be thrown away.