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Housing is dead, vacant lots show more promise.
problem with this though is that site value is a lot more than the view out the window.
For one, I need biweekly access to a Trader Joe's, or a delivery service that works as well.
Secondly, families need good schools I guess.
People generally want good area dining options, though I don't eat out much any more.
Security is a big thing, too. For me, I want security via obscurity. If nobody knows you're there, you're good.
But foremost is people need to live where the jobs are.
As for "vacant" lots, good luck finding one in a place you'd want to live.
these are exact as per my Haier 42" LCD specs at Amazon.
.. Perhaps 10W averages a couple hours of watching per day and then standby for the rest of the time? It should be at least a 100W+ while running
How much would it cost you to turn a shipping container into something as livable as a mobile home. (an actual door, insulation, ventilation, kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, flooring, something on the ceiling/walls to improve acoustics?
that's a million-dollar view, but with high-DPI television, a display view would be indisinguishable from the real thing.
'Cept a pane of glass would cost hundreds and that high-DPI screen would cost 10's of thousands of dollars.
Cut them, cut room entries and door ways to enter adjoining containers, stucco and crete the outside walls, and dry wall the interior it might be livable. But by time you do all that. All you would have saved is the labor on wall framers. As you would still need a suitable foundation slab to put it on. I would also go as far as to remove the bottom of the container to expose the slab bellow with the plumbing and electrical conduit. By time all of that work was done on the containers, the structural integrity would have been compromised. So what's the point?
Shipping containers are great for shipping big screen televisions, but are ill suited for entertaining super bowl parties, to watch the big game on a big screen television.
You lost all rights to this claim after buying a house which is a definition of much crap
not if the housing good itself is focused on the services you require.
Keep the rain out.
Keep the bugs out.
Keep the interior environment healthy, not too hot/cold.
Provide basics of daily life -- electrical outlets, water, sewage disposal.
Food storage and preparation.
The funny thing is that we're inculcated at birth that the housing good must be of the traditional form that currently surrounds us and takes up so much of our living space.
Some number of people have taken to live-aboard yachts, and the hippies tried alternative arrangements in the late 60s and early 70s too.
Me, maybe I don't even need a view, fake or otherwise. Just an internet connection.
And a Trader Joes!
example:
I woke up this morning with a 360 summit view of Mt. Tamalpais from their 360 Imax live webcam blueray feed. after I started working I switched to Bridge of star trek Enterprise .
http://www.youtube.com/embed/k2Rv2wZrj-0
My date that night wasn't going well so I switched to Imax 360 zombie attack, she flew into my arms
just type any address, and you have that residences view without the 45 years of slavery to pay for it.
the hippies tried alternative arrangements in the late 60s and early 70s too.
"Tried" being the keyword here.
Imagine an Ivy League Lawyer and a Wall street bank CEO trying to live in a Commune today?
"Irving it's your turn to plant the Yams."
"Can't we just pay some kids from the local town?"
A large part of a home's site value is what you can see out the window.
This struck me when sitting on a scenic park bench in SF:
that's a million-dollar view, but with high-DPI television, a display view would be indisinguishable from the real thing.
so why werent they selling for million dollars decades past ? Certainly can say the scenic view from Marin looking over the bay and the city... but even then you didnt see hyper price inflation.
Ok now it says 79 watts power on on the 42" LCD
That particular LCD on the energy star label consumes 240W while in operation.
If it were possible to power a 42" LCD for under 50W, people would probably be hanging them from the ceilings instead of LED bulbs to save energy.
http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/howmuch.html
this page quotes 42"lcd tv at 91-240 watts
(legend down right side of page)
JodyC linked an interesting Black Mirror episode here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1221296&c=929323#comment-929323
Combine the lcd shipping container with eye tracking in the new Samsung phone and there's your dystopia.
This is another stupid marketing idea.
What's next, showing starving people a picture of a nice juicy steak so they can pretend it's real?
My computer has a nice screen saver of a water fall, I don't really believe I live next to a waterfall. And I don't think anyone will take comfort in fake imagery knowing reality is not the same.
http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/howmuch.html
this page quotes 42"lcd tv at 91-240 watts
(legend down right side of page)
That makes a LOT more sense.
Honestly, I don't think that most people would go for the magic shipping container idea. There's still the fact that you can tell that you are in a small space because of the way sound will reflect inside, and the TV borders will kill the effect. The places in the world where people would see this as a great step up in quality of life are also places where people don't have electricity or running water.
I think that a vastly better long term solution to our "limited space" problem is to just cut the world's population in half.
I think that a vastly better long term solution to our "limited space" problem is to just cut the world's population in half.
There is plenty of space bmwman. Flyover country is pretty large. Just usually all the crooked and politically connected people buy all the right land right before anyone would want to develop or live there so they can flip it for profit in one day that others will pay 30 years to finally live on.
I think that a vastly better long term solution to our "limited space" problem is to just cut the world's population in half.
There is plenty of space bmwman. Flyover country is pretty large. Just usually all the crooked and politically connected people buy all the right land right before anyone would want to develop or live there so they can flip it for profit in one day that others will pay 30 years to finally live on.
There is plenty of space, but it isn't all equal.
I hear the argument that, "come on now, the earth is only half full." Well, growth is a funny thing. If population growth is 5%, it doubles every 14 years. If earth is indeed half full, then it'll be completely full in 14 years. Say that today the Earth is 25% full now. In 28 years it will be at max. In my opinion, there can not be such a thing as human dignity without personal space. Living in shipping containers is merely a band-aid on the bigger issue.
There's still the fact that you can tell that you are in a small space because of the way sound will reflect inside,
Carpet and acoustic ceiling can knock down a lot of that noise.
Living in shipping containers is merely a band-aid on the bigger issue.
Beats this:
http://www.amazon.com/Supersonic-SC-2411-Widescreen-1080p-Digital/dp/B007FH8OZY
They have 24" lcd Tv running on 12 volts
This may cut energy costs, or just shift it from a/c to d/c
Whats interesting with this multi-container house is in the comments it says they built it over 2 years with no mortgage or loan, just their cash flow.
http://www.youtube.com/embed/1amB4aheLqk
There is plenty of space bmwman. Flyover country is pretty large. Just usually all the crooked and politically connected people buy all the right land right before anyone would want to develop or live there so they can flip it for profit in one day that others will pay 30 years to finally live on.
The land owners of flyover states have nothing to complain about.
They are getting fat royalty checks in the mail for several decades to come.
Gas boom mints instant millionaires, so much for the Facesplat stock option nonsense.
The new technology is with lining the walls of a shipping container with LCD screens so you can basically live any where you want and change it with the touch of an iphone app. The cost of this could be around $25,000($2,500 to $5,000 for shipping container, $20,000 for LCD screens). You can live on the beach, or in the air above Mediterranean islands, or 100mph on a ski run powered with Imax in-home holo-deck technology in 360 degrees.
Housing is dead, vacant lots show more promise.
#housing