Folding awnings! Ow wow! I bet no-one's ever seen one of those before! Such an innovative idea! Goodness me, and it blends *_seamlessly_* into the design of the house, too! I'm totally astonished.
yeah, my thoughts watching this was pretty much: just how old is this video?! then i checked and....yeah. seriously, even my grandma knows ALL of these 'new' innovations already
@@a.mathis9454 it's not legal here in Canada. I doubt the people installing them bother with an inspector though. I've seen other versions with handrails though. I'm sure they're flimsy as hell though.
Moving to Sandpoint area was our dream about 10 years ago. Then, by the time it became feasible for us, the Californians moved in and priced us out of it. Moved to Alaska instead. Kind of feel like we dodged a bullet with the crazy population explosion there now. What you’re showing in the video, we drive 65mph on those roads around here. Only accidents are usually people from “down south” in the lower 48
Polypropylene does oxidize and degrade. It has a 20 year life span. So factor that into any large usage. Degradation can also happen in specific areas. Something to consider in structural strength and longevity. Especially when the degradation occurs in points critical to the overall products performance, safety and cost effectiveness.
0:00 : i built one for a customer. 0:03 a neighbour built one. 0:06 my best friend built it 0:12 i designed that to help a friend build one. When projector comes down, the White curtain also rolls down. All on voice controls, also paired with switching light off, and closing shutters. 0:16 i built several 0:19 a friend made one much more complex than that 0:23 i built one. ... Will you ever show something I have not already built, designed, or see in friend's house ?
@@christopherbedford9897 most things I look on RUclips are things I don't know, or did not learn yet. But this video title pretends all those things will improv my house. Hardly, since I already built most of them. It's even amazing that I have built « most » of them, as if this video was inspired from my own life. So it remains one question : what would improve my house ??? Obviously, not something from this channel. Many things would. But none is shown around. Many Other channels do bring me new ideas, or show things I would enjoy to build ... - stuff made here - Matthias wandel - works by design
2:04 those awnings have rails on the side, so not totally inconspicuous. 3:41 the home cinema looks very expensive and expensive to install. 8:08 underground callers were popular during the Cold War and were bomb/survival shelters. 10:02 the solid garage doors look like the old solid doors made for a long time.
I am in my early 60s and retired at 53. Lots of people gave me pushback because they had difficulty grasping the concept of not working if you don’t have to. I looked at my life as stages. I earned everything I have now through a lot of hard work, but I owe it to myself to “stop and smell the roses” in my final stage of life. In my case I left the country after I retired and live in Latin America. It allowed me to get away from all the negative things happening in America while appreciating my new environment. I have yet to meet anyone who regrets retirement.
It's unfortunate most people don't have such information. I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than a million dollars by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Doesn't matter if the economy is misbehaving; great wealth managers will always make returns.
I think this is something I should do, but I've been stalling for a long time now. I don't really know which firm to work with; I feel they are all the same but it seems you’ve got it all worked out with the firm you work with so i surely wouldn’t mind a recommendation.
I definitely share your sentiment about these firms. Finding financial advisors like *Layan Talia Chokr* who can assist you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.
Folding awnings! Ow wow! I bet no-one's ever seen one of those before! Such an innovative idea! Goodness me, and it blends *_seamlessly_* into the design of the house, too! I'm totally astonished.
😢😢😢
yeah, my thoughts watching this was pretty much: just how old is this video?! then i checked and....yeah. seriously, even my grandma knows ALL of these 'new' innovations already
Klapster ladder 😂😂. Thats the sound it makes when you fall off it drunk because it has no hand rails
Is it legal? Most countries I have looked at have require handrails (US, Australia, UK, Switzerland) if over a certain height.
@@a.mathis9454 it's not legal here in Canada. I doubt the people installing them bother with an inspector though. I've seen other versions with handrails though. I'm sure they're flimsy as hell though.
Good idea
Moving to Sandpoint area was our dream about 10 years ago. Then, by the time it became feasible for us, the Californians moved in and priced us out of it.
Moved to Alaska instead. Kind of feel like we dodged a bullet with the crazy population explosion there now.
What you’re showing in the video, we drive 65mph on those roads around here. Only accidents are usually people from “down south” in the lower 48
Polypropylene does oxidize and degrade. It has a 20 year life span. So factor that into any large usage. Degradation can also happen in specific areas. Something to consider in structural strength and longevity. Especially when the degradation occurs in points critical to the overall products performance, safety and cost effectiveness.
Lol! The hidden grill is described as an "unsightly box"!
0:00 : i built one for a customer.
0:03 a neighbour built one.
0:06 my best friend built it
0:12 i designed that to help a friend build one. When projector comes down, the White curtain also rolls down. All on voice controls, also paired with switching light off, and closing shutters.
0:16 i built several
0:19 a friend made one much more complex than that
0:23 i built one.
... Will you ever show something I have not already built, designed, or see in friend's house ?
More important question: will you ever not "one-up" a video you see on line?
@@christopherbedford9897 most things I look on RUclips are things I don't know, or did not learn yet.
But this video title pretends all those things will improv my house.
Hardly, since I already built most of them.
It's even amazing that I have built « most » of them, as if this video was inspired from my own life.
So it remains one question : what would improve my house ???
Obviously, not something from this channel.
Many things would. But none is shown around.
Many Other channels do bring me new ideas, or show things I would enjoy to build ...
- stuff made here
- Matthias wandel
- works by design
2:04 those awnings have rails on the side, so not totally inconspicuous.
3:41 the home cinema looks very expensive and expensive to install.
8:08 underground callers were popular during the Cold War and were bomb/survival shelters.
10:02 the solid garage doors look like the old solid doors made for a long time.
Nothing like spending 60k to store your trash cans
And have it broken by a lose pop can.
Can i mute the music?
"Multi layered birch" is a con man's way of saying plywood.
These automated things move way too slow. Nothing like waiting five minutes to throw out the trash or watch tv.
Not sure I would want that janky thing moving any faster. Looked like it could slice a dog in half when it fails.
yeah, but living near wild animals that get into the trash--this is actually a great idea!
Talking and music not easy.
Where's the thumbnail?
Thanks. Out!
18:34 does not seem bear resistant
Like just having a home doesn't cost enough as it is...
Cool
Drive is not a system for a climate with snow. Impossible to shovel, blow or plow such a surface.
idk...it's the same as any other gravel drive-like the one I plowed as a kid
I am in my early 60s and retired at 53. Lots of people gave me pushback because they had difficulty grasping the concept of not working if you don’t have to. I looked at my life as stages. I earned everything I have now through a lot of hard work, but I owe it to myself to “stop and smell the roses” in my final stage of life. In my case I left the country after I retired and live in Latin America. It allowed me to get away from all the negative things happening in America while appreciating my new environment. I have yet to meet anyone who regrets retirement.
It's unfortunate most people don't have such information. I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than a million dollars by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Doesn't matter if the economy is misbehaving; great wealth managers will always make returns.
I think this is something I should do, but I've been stalling for a long time now. I don't really know which firm to work with; I feel they are all the same but it seems you’ve got it all worked out with the firm you work with so i surely wouldn’t mind a recommendation.
I definitely share your sentiment about these firms. Finding financial advisors like *Layan Talia Chokr* who can assist you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.
Thank you for this Pointer. It was easy to find your handler, She seems very proficient and flexible. I booked a call session with her.
Howard Sprague did and came back.