I guess you could do that by nailing it down with screws or using magnets or some shit, I dunno
-
-
Show this thread
-
I guess one cool fact that I kind of knew before but makes the world make more sense now that I know it explicitly is "thermal mass" Heavy, massive, substantial furniture makes the temperature in your house more comfortable
Show this thread -
Mass holds heat, the more of it there is the more heat it holds Thermal mass slows down "heat flux", the rate at which your space heats up or cools down in response to external conditions
Show this thread -
If you've ever been in an empty house that hasn't been moved into yet you might've noticed it -- a big empty room with nothing in it is likely to either be freezing or roasting When the sunlight comes in it the air heats up right away and when it goes down the heat all leaves
Show this thread -
And part of what the furniture and stuff does is soak up the heat so it doesn't get hot so quickly, and then at night slowly release that heat to slow the temperature drop It's a "buffer"
Show this thread -
That's one reason stone stuff has gotten so trendy -- marble and granite and whatnot everywhere It's not *just* wealth signaling, because stone is expensive and having people move it around is also expensive
Show this thread -
The thing that makes stone so annoying -- that it is both bulky and heavy, it's a large amount of dense material and therefore very massive -- is what makes it objectively good for thermal regulation and can't be removed without removing that quality
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
the obvious way to do that would be to make furniture that can be disassembled and reassembled.
-
Well see that forces me to choose between actually reading a manual or instead have a chair that unpredictably collapses when I lean on it the wrong way because I put two sets of screws in going the same direction instead of opposite directions to brace each other
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
I believe that what you are describing is called "movers," who are a singularly decadent luxury.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.