"And I can just pet a horse and probably stay on it from there, or make a walking chair. Forge it is."
Some of it matches, some of it doesn't. Kib sends back images of the forge he worked in at home.
"I should actually do a design on paper and write out the program so I can confirm my guess of how big I need it, first, but figuring out what I'm working with is good, might affect the design."
"I've never worked in gold! That, like diamonds, is hard to come by. And it'd be too soft to hold the instructions if anything thwacked it. Iron's more customary."
Kib explores the forge a bit, identifying replacements for things - "Oh, of course you don't have a puppetable etcher. I'll have to make one of those first but that's easy. Especially if you just have diamonds lying around."
"I need one pointy diamond in its capacity as a really hard thing so I can etch golem instructions into the iron. It's doable without a diamond but the really nice servantmaker-catering smithies have diamond-tipped ones."
"Yes. Pointily, no cushion cuts. The finer I can get the lettering without making it too shallow the better."
"Then you shall have a book-copying golem. Are books a standard size here?"
"It matters for how much range of vision the golem needs and how long its arm needs to be, it's no big deal if they're smaller but it matters if they're sometimes bigger. Does color ever matter?"
"Golems are hard to upgrade, if you want one that does color later it'll have to be a whole new one."
"How many colors does it need to be able to distinguish and - considering how important handwriting is - how finely does it need to be able to place lines?"