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I don’t know the circumstances but this sounds very wrong. The moment you find a problem with the foundation, you call professionals. DIY has its value but your story is well beyond DIY.

Heh, so I oversimplified that part of the story in my original post, for the sake of brevity.

You're right, one shouldn't DIY the foundation of ones house, unless you really know what you're doing(and honestly, not even then: it's too much work!)

I'm not sure it was clear in my original comment, but the 1840 I wrote in there is the original construction year of the house. The technique my foundation was built with hasn't been used for a little over a century: Not a lot of construction firms around with experience in it! And it's not easy to replace a foundation, because, well, it's under the house! Luckily repairing turned out to be possible(simplifying again, sorry!), and not particularly difficult in technical terms. It just wasn't easy either, but in physical terms.

I did have a professional "building conservationist"(rough translation) over for consultation. Basically he looked over what was, I told him my plan, and then he told me what to do instead. (I actually wasn't far off - I had spent a lot of time reading up on it before he came - he just added a few (possibly vital) details I hadn't thought of)

The conservationist did have a construction firm and offered their services, but we had budgeted for a kitchen upgrade, and while we had some margins in the original plan, with the extra work we got surprised with, we were strained to afford the materials. Just the ground insulation material cost almost as much as the new IKEA kitchen furniture!

The good thing in all this is that the new construction should, in theory, according to the conservationist who actually does know these things, probably last a couple of centuries!


Not everyone has the means to call in a “professional” and pay the fully loaded price without trying to trim some fat. It sounds to me like they were taking the fat out of the foundation job by mining out a space for the repair. What he’s describing is probably between the mid five figures and the low six figures to get a professional to do. I don’t know many people who could come up with the down payment for a construction loan on that.

I also took on a remodel under similar conditions and I think that the decision they undertook was likely very reasonable at the time. The outcome, in retrospect, would be obvious as well. But sometimes you have to grit your teeth and finish something.


Agree completely. The other aspect for me is that LLMs make me unafraid to take on initiatives in areas I know nothing about and/or am uninterested in pursuing due to discrepancy in effort vs reward. As a result I end up doing more and learning more.

Well, urban areas tend to be much more expensive to live in, especially in California. And most people don’t work in tech and enjoy relatively good job prospects.

This is so ridiculous that I suspect that it will be even better publicity for them than the award itself.

It's some random Indie award, not the main The Game Awards. Clair Obscur has enough publicity already and rightly so.

Dunno if they even care too much about that, the game is already a breakaway success.

The airplane analogy is a good one. Ultimately, if it quacks like a duck and walks like a duck, does it really matter if it’s a real duck or an artificial one? Perhaps only if something tries to eat it, or another duck tries to mate with it. In most other contexts though it could be a valid replacement.

Just out of interest though, can you suggest some of these other contexts where you might want a valid replacement for a duck that looked like one, walked like one and quacked like one but was not one?

Decoy for duck hunting?

Are you suggesting LLMs are decoy for investor hunting?

In the same sly vein of humour, the first rule of Money Club is to never admit that the duck may be lame.

I just want one that removes the “gotta declutter all the floors and hide anything and everything that could possibly get stuck in the roller” prerequisite step completely. I’ve tried literally five different brands (including the top Chinese ones) and they all scream a variation of MAIN BRUSH JAMMED after running for a while.

America did not build a low trust society though. Just the opposite.

The issue is that trust was intentionally sabotaged.


Does it really matter? The result is the same regardless of how it came about.

Well, Trump is a showman after all.

I used it extensively for a week and gave it an honest chance. It’s really good for quickly troubleshooting small bugs. It doesn’t come anywhere close to Opus 4.5 though.

Apples and oranges comparison. I don’t think it’s the same and good for you for waiting on Opus to respond. I don’t have the energy.

> Waiting for Opus

Sir Opus is the fast one of the bunch. Try GPT 5.2 high.


Sir I don’t use GPT 5.2. I value speed and accuracy. Not accuracy alone.

"Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, three times is enemy action." -Ian Fleming, Goldfinger (1959)

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