ᐅ Today was the material and finish selection appointment, smile

Created on: 9 Mar 2017 13:40
N
Nordlys
Some leftover vacation days in March. We just had the selection appointment. This morning at nine. Selection appointment with the mid-sized company. Waiting for us were Mrs. L., the secretary, with a coffee; Mr. K., the master carpenter; and Mr. R., the head of masonry and roofing. Mr. K. starts. In front of him, the building plan of our house, next to him a laundry basket full of various bits and pieces. Let’s get started. With windows. He flips through the building specification. Ah, they’re from Poland. He rummages through the laundry basket and pulls out a profile sample. Veka, triple glazing, Roto fittings, Hoppe handles. The handles can also be lockable, costs extra. But then you just lose the keys, no one needs that, and if burglars want to get in, they will anyway; it just ends up broken... My wife examines the profile. Well, you can easily wipe off the dirt, can’t you? And colored, she asks? Mr. K., dryly: Yeah, it’s possible. But it’s a waste of money; it doesn’t make a difference when looking out either... So, it remains white. It goes on in that style with tiles, interior doors. When it comes to the exterior window sills, he really gets going. Yes, those are aluminum, white or nothing at all. He grins. And on the inside? Laundry basket. Granite slabs are brought to the table. Four pieces. Two disappear right away because they are polished high gloss. That’s nonsense, he says; anyway, you’ll just put flowers on them. My wife picks one from the remaining slabs. Done, moving on. The roofing expert chimes in. Hey, I need to take off some joints first, what’s the plan? He takes us outside. There lies a package from Braas with sample tiles. He picks out three. That one, that one, or that one is allowed in the building plan. We choose the dark red one. Gloss coating against moss? Doesn’t work, there are no trees here. In High German: You don’t need it because there are no trees where you are building. Okay, convinced. The roof is done. He storms off. Inside we go. Front door, Mr. K. says, now that’s a topic. So, here are the panels from Rodenberger; from K1 to K6 are included at no extra cost. The long handle costs 100 extra. The very long one 250. But that one is no good, it’s flimsy. Then take the short one for 100. We flip through. That one is good, he says. Stable, timeless, with K5 included, okay price, has some glass, lets some light into the hallway, but it’s not a department store door. Done... that’s the one. Now the interior staircase, he judges... Yeah, you take beech, it’s a hard, quiet wood. It’s coated with parquet lacquer, so it’s also durable. And as a railing, a handrail with metal rods. He grins, done. Can it be done differently? White? Hmm, he shakes his head. It’s possible. But... that costs more, you have to paint, sand, and fill more. You can see on his face what he thinks about white stairs. I give in. Beech, parquet lacquer. Matte. Then he and my wife decide where the towel radiator should go. Here or there! And how and where tiles will be installed... done. Oh yes, facade... we’ll do it like the garage, right? So, everything smooth and seamless. The plinth a little anthracite accent, everyone does that. He rummages for some color samples for the plinth from the basket. Yes, that will do.
Selection appointment with the mid-sized company. Two hours, one coffee, and not a penny extra paid.
Musketier25 Apr 2017 12:29
kaho674 schrieb:
racing up my overpriced white staircase.

I would say everything was done correctly. With the slow stairlift, you then have plenty of time to admire the overpriced white staircase.
kaho67425 Apr 2017 12:48
Musketier schrieb:

With the slow stairlift, you'll have plenty of time to admire the overpriced white staircase.

Yeah, but by then you’re probably already too blind to see it.
Musketier25 Apr 2017 13:07
ypg schrieb:
Wi-Fi is still considered an alternative when a cable is not desired or available

Even though I used to think the same and installed at least one dual LAN cable in every room, the development in the Wi-Fi sector has been remarkable. The latest routers now operate on multiple frequencies simultaneously, and the speeds are continuously increasing.
Additionally, the devices we use are changing. Who still has a desktop computer at home? Smartphones, laptops, and tablets are replacing fixed devices. So, Wi-Fi has become unavoidable.
Furthermore, in the future, there will be other devices that no one has thought of yet, which won’t have Ethernet cables connected.

Networks have spread from the corporate environment into households and have maintained a performance advantage. Since not everyone can install network cables in rental apartments, the consumer market is moving more towards Wi-Fi, which is driving innovation in this area.

In 10 years, when we are streaming data for our 3D hologram projector through Cat7 cables, Wi-Fi will have caught up, or each device will get its data directly from the cloud infrastructure in space, or something else entirely.
H
hanse987
25 Apr 2017 13:09
Nordlys schrieb:
The router goes into the phone socket, right? So you can just connect the PC to that device? Or do I have some strange routers?

OK, the router is in the office. Where is the main telephone socket from the telecom provider (I am assuming a standard telecom connection here)? Basement? To connect the main telephone socket to the router, 2 wires are sufficient, but I have noticed that usually a 4x2 wires (LAN) cable is installed. Are additional phone sockets planned? If yes, they need to run from the router because of VoIP, but you can also install LAN from the start and use the LAN sockets with adapters for telephone use. Another option is a DECT phone (cordless) with the router acting as the base station or the base station connected to the router. Is the range sufficient?

LAN at the TV. About a year ago, I also started using streaming media services more frequently. Since then, I watch streaming services more than regular TV programs. Wi-Fi works, but when multiple users share the Wi-Fi, the TV picture can sometimes freeze. LAN is simply more stable! Maybe someday there will be a desire to use telecom provider’s entertainment services.

These are just a few suggestions.
N
Nordlys
25 Apr 2017 13:23
Referring to the previous speaker: this concerns a 110 cm (43 inches) thick bungalow, with no basement, built with Ytong walls, a single story, one level. The telecommunications cable enters the house from the northwest, arriving in the utility room. The cable from that point then goes to the office in the south-central part of the house, centrally located between the living room and bedroom. That is the only telephone socket. The router with Wi-Fi signal connects there, which in my opinion should cover every room in the house as well as the terrace. My telephone fax machine, which has a cordless handset, will also connect to the router. It uses one landline number for voice and fax. The PC is also connected to the router. The iPads connect via Wi-Fi. That’s basically the plan. Possibly, there will also be a TV network socket, but our TV already supports Wi-Fi. We currently have DSL 16000, from which about 9000 actually arrive. YouTube on the TV works well. We, the two older ones who do not watch much TV, only watch the main channels, and if there is nothing interesting, the TV stays off. We listen to music and use the iPad for games or reading—with glasses! Karsten
11ant25 Apr 2017 13:38
Musketier schrieb:

In 10 years, when we transmit data for our 3D hologram projector over Cat7 cables, Wi-Fi will have advanced that far too, or every device will get data directly from a Google Cloud base station in space, or something like that.

And in 20 years, we won’t need anti-wrinkle cream anymore because the bathroom won’t have a mirror anymore; instead, it will be a monitor-camera combination whose camera chip will make us look younger in real time.

Somehow, this reminds me of Archibald Tuttle.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/