Sunday, August 16, 2015

letters

I would like to build a CAD that is free, and completely capable, and very easy to understand.

I would also like to build email that is actual letters, on paper, folded, and inserted into envelopes, of various types, and addressed, and stamped, with flaps, that close, and even seals ... that appear in actual mail boxes, in bundles, and if there are too many they are delivered to door steps, and in personal mail rooms they could be sorted, and in a pleasant drawing room they could be opened and read. Hold this under the light. I can't quite make it out.


Why not really do it? Your photos are spread out along the walls of an immensely long gallery. It is so long it curves with the surface of the earth and yet it is high up on an openwork superstructure, shaped like perfectly square cells, so that, as regards the wilderness, it is nothing but a shadow.


SecondLife isn't big enough, that's what it comes down to. And it isn't easy enough to understand. I would like to partner with them to bring my infinite, free, completely rational CAD together with theirs, and their avatars, including LindenDollars, and SecondLife itself. You have to think all sorts of thoughts to succeed in business. That's what Donld Trump just said.


Another thing I would like to create is a furnace filter that is even easier to clean and longer lasting than the finest product on the market. It's a kit that includes that, the Flanders NaturalAire filter, some fittings, and a completely natural easy to maintain supplemental filter. The Flanders filter is the most ecological and aesthetic filter made, it is completely suitable for decades long use, and it is structurally superb for use as a filter base. This is important because it's an ecological alternative and perfectly lovely and there are millions of potential customers.


Finally I would like to market environmental sensors, scales, and flow meters, that are shaped like coins or paper weights, and tubes, or wrap around power cords, and send periodic measurements to tablets and phones, where they are represented as charts.