I think it would depend on what forces are gonna ultimately be placed on the wall when it's done. If the brick and mortar pattern is very disorganized, that might lead to certain spots where stresses may concentrate in one place vs another. This would then mean the wall has certain spots where its more prone to failure, compared to a wall with a regular, even distribution of brick and mortar.
It's kinda like why we heat treat some metals. To alter the grain structure of them to give us certain properties.
man I just bought a 500GB SATA SSD as a boot drive for something like 2 months ago, and even then it felt like things were a bit more expensive than they should be. I hate this current tech landscape
Thats wild that this rich person complains that they don't want traffic to maybe back up near their house, so the city comes up with a different traffic plan, but then cheaps out on the safety analysis? If you're gonna listen to this one rich person (which you shouldn't), at least make them pay the bill for a full safety analysis???
its pretty rampant these days. My dad had been using a web hosting company since the 90's, and recently they got bought by some investment bank that just raised prices about 6x with barely any warning. He had to scramble to migrate the bulk of the stuff he had on there to somewhere more sane.
Idk if its exactly the genre you're looking for, but Armored Core 6 is on PC, and pretty much all the other games in the series were on console, so the game plays well with a controller. You customize and control a mech in 3rd person and shoot stuff in different missions.
Pressure Cookers are wonderful for beans. Something like the Instant Pot can cook beans for you, as well as a whole bunch of other stuff. If you're not comfortable with pressure cookers, there's also slow cookers, tho they'll take longer than just boiling the beans.
You could also just put the beans, water/stock, whatever seasonings you want in an oven proof pot, bring it up to a boil on the stove, and then transfer it into a 325F oven and let it go for 1-1.5 hours
Probably is worth the piece of mind to let memtest86+ run for a few cycles overnight, so you can rule memory out. Memory issues are never fun.
May also want to check out the BIOS and play with the XMP settings for memory, if you've got any. I had a bunch of weird freezing issues (though mostly related to sleep mode) that stopped once I set my memory to a different XMP profile
My parents bought an Echo Show that they pretty much just ignore nowadays, except to set a timer or tell them the weather every once in a while. All it does all day is sit there and show ads for random stuff. It makes a terrible clock because its too busy showing ads half the time to actually show you the time in a font you can read from across the room. I know you can ask it to tell you the time, but thats so much slower than just looking at a normal clock
I think it would depend on what forces are gonna ultimately be placed on the wall when it's done. If the brick and mortar pattern is very disorganized, that might lead to certain spots where stresses may concentrate in one place vs another. This would then mean the wall has certain spots where its more prone to failure, compared to a wall with a regular, even distribution of brick and mortar.
It's kinda like why we heat treat some metals. To alter the grain structure of them to give us certain properties.