Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Furnace in Progress

The new furnace guys arrived bright and early this morning.  They're almost done  already.  And the new furnace requires a smaller power line, fewer amps, than the old one: more oomph, more efficient, so less energy.  \o/

EDIT 5 PM 12/14/16: Furnace is installed and working.  Regrettably the new thermostat is a computer.  No buttons at all anymore, just a computer.  *sigh*  I miss when things had dials and buttons that were simple and easy to use.  It alarms me how much of the world is turning into computers, because many people are not good with computers.  That reduces functionality. When it's an entertainment device such as a television, this is merely inconvenient and annoying; I don't need  a television.  I do need a thermostat, and having one that is quite likely to malfunction if I ever touch it -- if I could make it work at all -- is nerve-wracking.  I resent the tide of technology taking away formerly ubiquitous solutions that are perfectly possible to make, people just don't bother anymore.
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  • 13 comments
Are the wall oven and stovetop gone, as in physically removed, or "just" non-functional?

The problem you describe is maddening, yes. It suggests a niche occupation to me, though: an itinerant repair person - possibly a college student on a gap year? - who tours the country, perhaps in a VW bus or mini-motorhome, earning zir way by fixing analog devices that local repair people disdain. Someone like Kaylee from Firefly (who had no formal mechanical training when she started, but had super-nary mechanical intuition) would be perfect for this. I think such people *do* exist in L-America ... we just need to find them and help them make the right connections!
>> Are the wall oven and stovetop gone, as in physically removed, or "just" non-functional? <<

Still there. By this point, continued degradation of elements may have rendered them unfixable. It's been a long time. I don't know.

>> The problem you describe is maddening, yes. It suggests a niche occupation to me, though: an itinerant repair person - possibly a college student on a gap year? - who tours the country, perhaps in a VW bus or mini-motorhome, earning zir way by fixing analog devices that local repair people disdain. Someone like Kaylee from Firefly (who had no formal mechanical training when she started, but had super-nary mechanical intuition) would be perfect for this. I think such people *do* exist in L-America ... we just need to find them and help them make the right connections! <<

That is an excellent idea. And yes, mechanical intuition is a thing. My grandfather had it; my mother has it.

Notice that over in T-America, handywork is a fairly common profession. Most work for themselves, although some run community center repair nights or a fixit shop or even a place like a garage that employs several people. Janie has a loose conglomeration of other handies she can team up with for big projects; she knows enough to supervise. Smaller stuff she does on her own. Closely related, oddjobbing is also popular, like Turq is picking up.

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