It’s… a place. A mess, but that’s fine. I can’t find anything if I put it away.

Yes, I know the last post here was 1y ago. I’m not going to Reddit for this.
It’s… a place. A mess, but that’s fine. I can’t find anything if I put it away.

Yes, I know the last post here was 1y ago. I’m not going to Reddit for this.
Having money for Macs but not for walls shows a priority which I cannot understand.
I only see 1 in the image and it has the glowing apple logo on the back so the newest it could possibly be is 2015… not exactly a big spend i think
There are actually six vintage Macs in the photo. On the left is a 2015 MacBook Pro (wild to think that’s old now, the last of the glowing Apple logo Macs), and on the right is an iMac G4 (on the desk), an iMac G3 (on the floor), and a Power Mac G4, a Power Mac G5, and an iBook G4 underneath the desk.
Not so much buying the drywall as actually… putting it up.
If you have walls, it’s “finished” space and may be taxed higher.
Huh, I didn’t know that. Is that a US thing?
This is in Canada, but it might be the similar idea. Most houses, when built, do not have finished basements. I’m not certain as to why that is, but that was the case with this house.
Taxed higher as it raises the overall value of your home.
Here, it’s only the ceiling that matters.