Hacker Timesnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I don't care too much what it looks like on the outside, cause I'll be inside for much more time than i spend looking at the outside.

I had this exact thought. My primary concern about a house is how well the interior has been designed for my needs. The exterior appearance is way down on my list.

Unfortunately the article didn't even mention interior. I've seen a lot of absolutely awful interior floor plans.



The modern home's interior spaces are even more abusive of the client's reasonable desires as opposed to a rational integration of these desires into a whole. I toured a development's model homes at the beginning of the current big-screen TV era. I looked in vain for a place on a wall that could hold a 55-inch flat screen. I did find a cubbie hole near the dining table that was described as intended for a 32-inch tube TV. And if you own several paintings, better board up several windows.


I looked in vain for a place on a wall that could hold a 55-inch flat screen

I don't think this has gotten better. I toured some homes last year, and the flat screen TVs were placed above the fireplace. Two problems: 1) you wind up constantly craning your neck to watch TV, and 2) if you actually use the fireplace the TV probably gets much warmer than it should.

And yet these houses all sell for $500,000 or more. Or even a few million dollars in expensive places like the Bay Area.


I agree that the TV-above-the-fireplace thing is insane for exactly the reasons you mentioned, but I fear that the real problem there is that too many homeowners haven't really thought it through and want to do exactly that. :( I can almost guarantee that there will be angry replies in this thread from people who have done this and will defend it to the death in large part because they committed to it years ago and don't want to believe that they made a terrible mistake, especially now that they're used to it.

As someone who thinks about this stuff way too much, TVs above fireplaces are up there with leaving high frame rate supersampling (i.e., the "soap opera effect") turned on, and people who leave horizontal stretching enabled because that distortion is somehow less visually disturbing to them than pillarboxing when viewing SD content on an HD display. Needless to say, I'm really fun at parties. :)


Eh, I leave my TV's frame interpolation on because now I'm used to it, 24fps is like watching in judder-vision.


I have my TV above the fireplace. I was concerned about overheating but in practice it's not a problem. Modern gas fireplaces don't actually give off much heat. They're designed to look nice and burn minimal fuel.


He does say at the end it's the first in a series, but I had the same thought. Perhaps we'll see another follow up about bad interior design?




Consider applying for YC's Summer 2026 batch! Applications are open till May 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: