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2005 Apr 11, 5:00pm   138,837 views  117,730 comments

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115364   HeadSet   2022 Apr 6, 7:24am  

Classic adolescent attitude. Like the 18-year-old living at home who wants the adult rights to come and go as he pleases, bring girls home, use the car, and eat for free. However, he does not see the adult responsibilities to support himself or contribute in any meaningful way.
115365   RWSGFY   2022 Apr 6, 7:29am  

"Defend the country if the need should arise but only if you like the current President and the GDP per capita is over a certain number"
115366   Goran_K   2022 Apr 6, 7:29am  

WineHorror1 says
Goran_K says
California is the poster child of anti-development sentiment, and look what it has brought for residents of the SF Bay Area or SoCal? Extremely high prices, limited supply, and overwhelming demand that cannot be satisfied because the regulatory environment has made it difficult to increase supply.

Don't forget all the illegal immigration problems.


Yeah, that's about to become a nation wide crisis in about a month as Sleepy Joe eliminated title 42.
115367   WookieMan   2022 Apr 6, 8:08am  

Goran_K says
ou can't have it both ways. You can't complain that there aren't any rentals on the market, or that the market rate is too high, and at the same time argue that companies like Lennar should be taxed into oblivion for literally helping to fix the problem by increasing supply.

Agree. Plus Lennar will employ a shit ton of trades, sales, marketing, etc. for building it. Big corps have massive advantages, but they're still providing a lot of jobs people may not have had. Responsible building helps everyone and every business. The local market or gas station is going to see an increase in traffic and property value.

This seems more like a gentrification issue. Dealt with it in Pilsen with the low income Mexicans in Chicago. Bitch about being priced out because you were too lazy to buy property when it was pennies on the dollar. Jealousy is a hard pill to swallow. Deal with it on a daily basis with my wife's work. She slips up, but anytime someone finds out what my wife makes it changes the relationship. Things people don't understand is it's not all unicorns and rainbows in our household just because we make great money. We have our struggles no different than the garbage man. It's how you handle the struggle that makes you successful.
115368   RWSGFY   2022 Apr 6, 8:14am  

Goran_K says
I'll play Market advocate here.

In many real estate markets like Dallas, Austin, SF Bay Area, SoCal, etc the amount of housing available to be rented on the market is far below the DEMAND. The reason the "market rate" equilibrium is so high is because the intersection of supply and demand has made it that way.

Why then should we be punishing firms that are actually creating housing to meet demand? 225 units is not some small amount and I am sure ALL of those apartments will have renters ready to throw down their deposit checks and move in ASAP.

You can't have it both ways. You can't complain that there aren't any rentals on the market, or that the market rate is too high, and at the same time argue that companies like Lennar should be taxed into oblivion for literally helping to fix the problem by increasing supply.

California is the poster child of anti-development sentiment, and look what it has brought for residents of the SF Bay Area or SoCal? Extrem...


SF Bay Area is being built out like crazy.
115369   WookieMan   2022 Apr 6, 8:15am  

Get out of cities and urban areas. Our infrastructure is fucked including privately owned buildings like this. Florida is literally a swamp. I love it, but mid and high rises have barely been tested long term with the soil and water table they have there. And no, not a climate change comment, but just stating that we don't have much data on long term usage and structural integrity of tall(ish) buildings in this area.

Even the best engineer will make a mistake. The soil and water make that even more likely.
115370   RWSGFY   2022 Apr 6, 8:24am  

God, that thing is butt-ugly.
115371   Goran_K   2022 Apr 6, 8:24am  

RWSGFY says

California is the poster child of anti-development sentiment, and look what it has brought for residents of the SF Bay Area or SoCal? Extrem...


SF Bay Area is being built out like crazy.


Well I'll admit, I haven't been in the Bay Area proper for a long time, but I do remember that the "low income housing" debate in San Francisco ended up being a total fiasco and nothing was accomplished even though bonds were passed by voters to address those specific issues. They originally planned to build something like 30,000 units. I don't believe even 5% of that has been built.

In SoCal for instance, I know numerous apartment builders have had their projects defeated by the coastal commission, and most of the building is happening far more inland (Riverside, SB, etc) where the coastal commission has far less effect.

This has lead to some of the most expensive rents in the country in Orange County for instance. 2-3 bedroom apartments are now surpassing the $4,000+ mark. This is the result of government intervention locking up the supply side of the housing equation.
115372   WookieMan   2022 Apr 6, 8:26am  

RWSGFY says
SF Bay Area is being built out like crazy.

I don't understand the appeal of the Bay Area. I have not enjoyed any of my visits. From my travels it's literally the least desirable part of the state from my experience. Socal and N cal are the best spots in my opinion. Obviously work and making money is the determining factor. Weather wise it's good, but I've frankly experienced no redeeming quality in the 5 or so visits as a kid and an adult.

I'm pretty simple and easy to please. The homeless and gayness is staggering. Outside of a SFO layover or CA vacation launching point, I don't think I'll go to the Bay Area ever again. Definitely won't go to visit it as a destination. If a conference hits there I might go, but I have 0% interest in going there. There are so many other places that are awesome if you can deal with less than perfect weather.
115373   SoTex   2022 Apr 6, 8:53am  

RWSGFY says
God, that thing is butt-ugly.


True, but it blows away soviet architecture from the same era.

*Not saying much lol
115374   zzyzzx   2022 Apr 6, 9:46am  

Literal Housing crash!
115375   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Apr 6, 9:47am  

And the Millenium Tower in SF was recently found to be tilting an additional seven inches since restabilization efforts began.
115376   Blue   2022 Apr 6, 9:57am  

WineHorror1 says
Politicians have caused all of these divisions. Its being done on purpose.

Now we know why people love “democracy”.
115377   Ceffer   2022 Apr 6, 10:00am  

Since the Great Pyramid of Giza, architecture has been all down hill.

Maybe the FBI heard McAfee kept his backups there, and they need to bring the building down.
115378   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 6, 10:04am  

Goran_K says
You can't have it both ways. You can't complain that there aren't any rentals on the market, or that the market rate is too high, and at the same time argue that companies like Lennar should be taxed into oblivion for literally helping to fix the problem by increasing supply.

California is the poster child of anti-development sentiment, and look what it has brought for residents of the SF Bay Area or SoCal? Extremely high prices, limited supply, and overwhelming demand that cannot be satisfied because the regulatory environment has made it difficult to increase supply.


This.

I looked at the area around Disney and the convention Center in Anaheim, I couldn't believe how close SFHs were to the Downtown.

Why haven't they been knocked down and replaced with denser housing decades ago?

Anti-development mentality.
115379   AD   2022 Apr 6, 10:20am  

50 years old building near the beach of Miami.

I wonder what the maintenance logs show of the concrete structure.

How bad is the spalling and disintegration of the concrete, as I'd love to see photos.
115380   Ceffer   2022 Apr 6, 11:25am  

A squirrel box for every squirrel. Maybe a squirrel box for every ten squirrels. Get ready to be dorm-ed up.
115381   Ceffer   2022 Apr 6, 11:37am  

I thought God invented hurricanes and Ukrainian Nazis for this work.
115382   Goran_K   2022 Apr 6, 11:52am  

AmericanKulak says
Goran_K says
You can't have it both ways. You can't complain that there aren't any rentals on the market, or that the market rate is too high, and at the same time argue that companies like Lennar should be taxed into oblivion for literally helping to fix the problem by increasing supply.

California is the poster child of anti-development sentiment, and look what it has brought for residents of the SF Bay Area or SoCal? Extremely high prices, limited supply, and overwhelming demand that cannot be satisfied because the regulatory environment has made it difficult to increase supply.


This.

I looked at the area around Disney and the convention Center in Anaheim, I couldn't believe how close SFHs were to the Downtown.

Why haven't they been knocked down and replaced with denser housing decades ago?

Anti-development mentality.


Yup.

I think a bigger offender is the Sunset District in SF. Old 70-80 year old 2-story box homes, most of them roach infested, run down fire hazards that insurance companies barely insure. One might wonder what more modern, taller, safer, apartment buildings could do to help in alleviating the housing crunch in SF.

Here's the thing, I'm not anti development, or pro-gentrification. I'm just saying you can't have it both ways. If you want the growth, you have to make hard choices that may in the end change the entire face of a neighborhood. If you want to "maintain" the neighborhood, then you have to give up the growth. Something at some point has to give.
115383   keeprubbersidedown   2022 Apr 6, 12:01pm  

I do not have an MBA but grew my business in LA year after year by double. I hired several Harvard MBAs. Super nice people but they wanted super high pay and were of little benefit. Great at writing papers, poor at motivating other employees.
115384   Goran_K   2022 Apr 6, 12:27pm  

MBA = More Bad Advice

As someone who has an MBA, I'd take a person with 10+ years of market specific experience over a $150,000 MBA grad any day and twice on Sunday.
115385   AD   2022 Apr 6, 12:47pm  

Yeah, "luxury apartments" which means overpriced housing with vinyl plank flooring is the norm from what I've seen recently in Panama City Beach, Florida.
115386   Rin   2022 Apr 6, 1:20pm  

I call in MBA-ology. In other words, the most useless of all academic accolades. I mean sure, you may find a PhD Physicist or JD Attorney, not be able to manage but at least they know something about the physical sciences or legal issues in question.
115387   Rin   2022 Apr 6, 1:24pm  

keeprubbersidedown says
wanted super high pay


I live in Boston & the word about HBS is that their grads don't underbid each other for pay. This is why many simply opt for a McKinsey or Goldman Sachs career track because those starting salaries are guaranteed, meritorious or not. So if you find 'em outside of the big management consulting or financial services houses then they're not among the insiders league but regular HBS grads looking for a paycheck to measure up to their more well-endowed (no penis pun intended) classmates.
115388   richwicks   2022 Apr 6, 2:44pm  

DooDahMan says
A few watts of power are necessary for lighting at night. The device used in the research generated 50 milliwatts per square meter, meaning just over 215 square feet of solar cell area would be required for nighttime lighting.


That's 10 watts. You could light a single light bulb with that or charge a couple of phones. That's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.
115389   richwicks   2022 Apr 6, 2:59pm  

DooDahMan says
richwicks says
That's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.


Reading the papers from Stanford and U.C. Davis this is still in the infancy stage. Kind of suspect this will get attention worldwide and a mad scramble will be on - there are $$ to be made here.


I was really interested in Peltier junctions at one point and Stirling Engines. The amount of energy you can get from minor temperature differentials is low, even with 100% efficiency.

But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.
115390   HeadSet   2022 Apr 6, 3:02pm  

DooDahMan says
“The solar cell is a pretty good thermal emitter, meaning it likes to emit heat a bit at night,”

So is a plain old roof. Why not just put these thermo-electric modules on any surface that re-radiates heat at night? Even bricks radiate heat at night.
115391   EBGuy   2022 Apr 6, 3:07pm  

It's all fun and games until someone wraps you in copper mesh and tells you that you're the "hot side" of a TEG...
115392   tanked   2022 Apr 6, 3:38pm  

richwicks says
DooDahMan says
A few watts of power are necessary for lighting at night. The device used in the research generated 50 milliwatts per square meter, meaning just over 215 square feet of solar cell area would be required for nighttime lighting.


That's 10 watts. You could light a single light bulb with that or charge a couple of phones. That's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.


in other words a battery array works better
115393   Shaman   2022 Apr 6, 3:52pm  

richwicks says
DooDahMan says
richwicks says
That's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.


But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.


I’ve been watching “The Dropout” on Hulu with the wife. Elizabeth Holmes basically took an idea for a blood test machine and talked a bunch of scientists and engineers into working for her company to design and produce it. She monetized the company with investment after investment while hyping the product that hadn’t even been created yet! This went on for like ten years and escalated so far that she was “worth” 4 billion dollars because she scared up so very much investment in her company. But it was all a fraud and the device was never created, only hyped. And eventually the scheme came crashing down when a whistleblower sounded fraud. She lost it all and went to jail.
115394   RWSGFY   2022 Apr 6, 4:27pm  

5 days late, mate.
115395   Misc   2022 Apr 6, 4:33pm  

She's not in jail yet. Sentencing isn't until September 26.

Sure, the fraud was reported and investigated years ago, but for some people the justice system just seems to work for themShaman says
richwicks says
DooDahMan says
richwicks says
That's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.


But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.


I’ve been watching “The Dropout” on Hulu with the wife. Elizabeth Holmes basically took an idea for a blood test machine and talked a bunch of scientists and engineers into working for her company to design and produce it. She monetized the company with investment after investment while hyping the product that hadn’t even been created yet! This went on for like ten years and escalated so far that she was “worth” 4 billion dollars because she scared up so very much investment in her company. But it was all a fraud and th...


She's not in jail yet. Sentencing isn't until September 26.

Sure, the fraud was reported and investigated years ago, but for some people the justice system just seems to work for them. She was finally convicted in January, but you know sentencing in September. I think that will get postponed, as well. I'm sure she has coin hidden from the government that she can use for bribes. Probably everything postponed until after her appeals (in a few more years).

Do you really think anything except maybe a wrist slap is going to happen to her?
115396   NuttBoxer   2022 Apr 6, 4:40pm  

DooDahMan says
A Dallas neighborhood that's being demolished for high-rise condos shows how the housing crisis is changing the face of American cities


I've been renting my entire life, and never once have I had a crises in housing.

Long game here is government housing for all, you'll own nothing and be fucking delirious!
115397   HeadSet   2022 Apr 6, 5:20pm  

DooDahMan says
possession of a machine gun

"Machine gun?" As in a fully automatic weapon? Tommy gun? AK-47? M-4?
115398   Eric Holder   2022 Apr 6, 5:22pm  

DooDahMan says
Middle East oil that now goes to China will have to be redirected to Europe, again spending more time on the water.


Huh? That guy needs to see the map pronto.
115399   Someone_else   2022 Apr 6, 7:04pm  

Speaking of Credit Suisse, Putins invasion covers banking scandal. Always take care of their own.
Can hardly stop listening to his sons piano: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gTa4QHXAviU&source=patrick.net
115400   AD   2022 Apr 6, 7:19pm  

Exactly, Biden and Democrats are promoting demand side economics only. Think about him postponing student loan payments. That is like dropping cash from a helicopter onto the masses of freeloader Democrat voters.

Reagan was right as far as focusing on supply side economics. We are being destroyed cause we don't value production and supply. All we want to do is drop cash from a helicopter.

AD
115401   clambo   2022 Apr 6, 10:08pm  

I remember a concrete lighthouse in Baja California Sur Mexico, in Guerrero Negro.

It had a concrete spiral staircase which was crumbling.

Evidently concrete is porous and salt air gets to the rebar, which rusts and expands, degrading the concrete.

I once knew a woman who sold a concrete sealer to towns (parking structures) and builders, it’s a big market in Florida.
115402   AD   2022 Apr 6, 10:29pm  

clambo says
Evidently concrete is porous and salt air gets to the rebar, which rusts and expands, degrading the concrete.


Yep that is why you want to properly seal it and make sure it is coated. This may mean re coating it every 7 to 10 years.
115403   Hircus   2022 Apr 6, 10:59pm  

richwicks says

But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.


So true. To this day, people still buy those hydrogen conversion kits for automobiles which promise them "free energy" and "increased MPG". They do work, but the amount of hydrogen produced is so miniscule ... I'm not even sure it's enough to boost your speed idle by 50 rpm.

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