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  3. Are there any common household items or products that you think are designed incredibly poorly?

Are there any common household items or products that you think are designed incredibly poorly?

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asklemmy
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  • Z [email protected]

    I just replaced my windshield wipers last night and it was a nightmare. The wipers I got are supposed to be universal, which means the little plastic bit that connects to the wiper arms has a bunch of little sub parts that you're supposed to remove based on what wiper arm connection your car uses. Well, considering I'm not well versed in modern wiper arm connection standards, and I'm also stubborn and don't think you should need to dig out your car manual just to change your fucking wipers, coupled with the fact that the instructions that came with the wipers are just 6 wordless diagrams vaguely showing you what bits to remove based on which esoteric wiper style your car uses, I struggled with those sons of bitches for like 20 minutes in below freezing weather.

    bigdaddyslim@lemmy.worldB This user is from outside of this forum
    bigdaddyslim@lemmy.worldB This user is from outside of this forum
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    wrote on last edited by
    #221

    Not even just that, but modern vehicles make it a pain in the ass to just put your wipers up before a snow storm. Used to be you just lift them up and they're done. Now you have to get in the car, hold the wiper stalk up to the manual wipe mode and let them go up before you can get back out and lift them. I know it's for aerodynamics hiding them under the cowel but it's still a pain in the ass. My last 2 cars have had this feature.

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    • S [email protected]

      Yeah, why do people blow their noses into PAPER when you can just go to the bathroom sink and hork in your hands, and then wash up afterwards??? Why would people walk around with dried boogies on they face when they can wash?? Why? Why, Mister Anderson, why, why?

      M This user is from outside of this forum
      M This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote on last edited by
      #222

      It's probably habit, but it just feels somehow wrong to blow my nose without a piece of paper snugly against my nostrils. Like trying to poop without being seated on a toilet bowl.

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      • R [email protected]

        A person of culture I see

        L This user is from outside of this forum
        L This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote on last edited by
        #223

        I just came over here from reddit. I’ve got some things to learn. Cut me some slack.🤣

        R 1 Reply Last reply
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        • bpt11@sh.itjust.worksB [email protected]

          For example, I'm incredibly confused about how you're supposedly to measure liquid laundry detergent with the cap. At least the kind that I have sits on it's side, so if you measure it with the cap it just leaks everywhere and makes a mess.

          Or at my parents house they have a bag of captain crunch berries that has a new design, where instead of zipping along the top of the bag like normal, it has a zipper in the front slightly beneath the top. That way when you poor it you can't see what you're doing cuz the bag is in the way. Like what the heck who's idea was that?

          B This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote on last edited by
          #224

          Garlic crushers. All of them suck.

          D hossenfeffer@feddit.ukH T N 4 Replies Last reply
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          • B [email protected]

            Garlic crushers. All of them suck.

            D This user is from outside of this forum
            D This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote on last edited by
            #225

            You need to look harder. Source: I went down this road. Find one with a solid stainless steel construction.

            M 1 Reply Last reply
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            • N [email protected]

              When I was a kid cereal didn't have no zippers! We rolled up the one end and watched it partially unfurl when we let go, and we were satisfied with that.

              D This user is from outside of this forum
              D This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote on last edited by
              #226

              Roll the bag. Flip the box upside down. Put it in going up. Hold it in place and flip the box back over. Gravity holds the bag closed. This is a bad idea if anyone else accesses the box and isn't on the same page as you.

              rmuk@feddit.ukR S 2 Replies Last reply
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              • M [email protected]

                To be fair, most are. At the end of the day, today's economy makes it far more profitable to choose either extremely cheap or extremely expensive, making good, lasting, but not perfect products is just not what consumers seem to want. People eother want something cheap that works okay, or something really well made that justifies the price.

                I feel like 99% of products I interact with get me frustrated with their simple-to-fix design flaws.

                But as for your question: fucking toothpaste containers! Could you make a more frustrating and intentionally bad design?? Why is it that if I cut them open I can get like another few days to a week of brushing? Why not put tooth paste in a jar with a little spoon? Or an opening that is small so that the amount that is left after squeezing your best, is truly insignificant? Why. Must. I. Suffer?

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                wrote on last edited by
                #227

                I think if they just designed the tubes conically, with no rigid end besides the male part of the cap, you'd have barely any waste.

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                • F [email protected]

                  I've always thought that most toilet paper holders are over engineered. You don't need a little springy rod between 2 posts, you just need an L-shaped bar with the short end screwed to the wall and maybe a little knob on the end of the long side to keep the roll from sliding off. And it's not that the spring style is especially difficult to use or prone to failure or anything, it just seems like a no-brainer to me to use a one-piece holder with no moving parts instead of one that has at least 4 parts (the base, 2 halves of the roller, and a spring) I'm seeing more of that style around these days, which I appreciate.

                  Stove vent hoods that don't actually vent outside are fucking stupid. My over the range microwave basically just takes smoke from my stove and blows it back out over my head almost directly at the smoke detector.

                  I've frequently run into shelves, mounting brackets, etc. that seem to totally disregard stud spacing. We got one of those fancy Samsung frame TV's a while back, to get it to sit so flush to the wall it has its own special mounting brackets, 2 little plates with sort of a modified keyhole slot that you slot 2 little knobs on the back of the TV into. It's actually not a half bad way to mount a TV, probably one of the easier TV wall mounts I've ever personally used, the tv itself is actually pretty damn lightweight (because they moved all the heavy electronics into a separate box you need to hide somewhere) but still I wanted to make sure my fancy TV wouldn't fall off the wall, so I wanted to mount it to the studs, but of course the spacing of the brackets doesn't allow that option. I was able to bolt one side a stud but I had to get some toggle bolts for the other side. I'm pretty sure the whole TV is well within the rated weight capacity of one of those toggle bolts in drywall, let alone 2 in drywall and 2 in a stud, but still, it feels like a dumb design choice. (It's possible that other sizes or newer models do allow for mounting entirely to studs, the size and model I got didn't)

                  I helped a friend replace the wax ring on his toilet recently with one of the newer style rubber gaskets, which as it turns out made the toilet sit imperceptibly higher, which meant that the bolts holding it down were no longer quite long enough to screw the nut onto to tighten it down. With a quick trip to ace hardware and a minute perusing my options, I settled on some Danco zero cut bolts, and I definitely think that is a far superior design to the standard bolts that are probably holding down damn-near every toilet you've ever used.

                  On the subject of toilets, I can't think of any particularly good reason for the tank to be a separate piece from the rest of the throne like on most toilets. The gasket and bolts there just add more places for something to start leaking. It's probably an ease of manufacturing thing, but we have the technology to make one piece toilets now, the two piece style should be obsolete.

                  D This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #228

                  A lot of toilet paper holders are secured to the wall with drywall hangers. An L-shaped one-piece one is basically asking to be torqued right out of the wall.

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                  • lemmie689@lemmy.sdf.orgL [email protected]

                    I had some plastic clothes-pins that became severely degraded from uv sunlight.

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                    wrote on last edited by
                    #229

                    Wait until you hear about PEX piping.

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                    • C [email protected]

                      Wide foot owner here - can confirm shoe and sock should come in multiple widths not just lengths

                      D This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #230

                      Shoe sizes need to go too. Just measure it in centimeters.

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                      • sterile_technique@lemmy.worldS [email protected]

                        I’m incredibly confused about how you’re supposedly to measure liquid laundry detergent with the cap.

                        You just gave me a stupid idea. First measure out the exact volume of detergent you need for one load - eyeballing it I'd guess 20mL (I'm notoriously terrible at eyeballing volume, so, grain of salt) - then get a 20mL syringe and some IV tubing (it's got one-way valves, so when you connect a syringe to it and draw up, it pulls from on side of the line; then when you depress the syringe back down, it goes out the other side). Tie something heavy to the intake side of the line and throw it in the bucket of detergent. Run the other side of the line to just above the detergent receptacle if your machine has one; or near the door for you to just aim it.

                        Load clothes; pull syringe, push syringe, close the door, run the machine. No detergent dripping all over the place!

                         

                        ...detergent is probably too viscous as-is to go through IV tubing at an acceptable rate, so you'd probably have to dilute it with water first to thin it out, then adjust the amount you pull accordingly.

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                        wrote on last edited by
                        #231

                        The pumps they sell for coffee syrup dispensers maybe.

                        sterile_technique@lemmy.worldS 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • R [email protected]

                          Why would a permanent lamp be socketed at all? If it's permanent wire that shit properly.

                          gratux@lemmy.blahaj.zoneG This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote on last edited by
                          #232

                          Indeed! In my example, I have this IKEA LED Strip above my kitchen working area, and the power supply is integrated with the plug. There are multiple choices for power supply, but to my knowledge all of them are socketed.

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                          • T [email protected]

                            Why the hell do i have to know which way to put the batteries in at this point ?

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                            wrote on last edited by
                            #233

                            Batteries have a plus and a minus, the spring is generally the flatter end which is generally negative, they’re designed that way to be stackable, although we could probably come up with a slightly more intuitive design.

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                            • O [email protected]

                              Anyone got good knife recommendations I'm in the market right now??

                              General purpose for meats and veggie cutting.

                              I'm currently using a victorinox fibrox. It's great but loses edge rather quickly requiring honing each meal and sometimes during cutting of ingredients.

                              dunz@feddit.nuD This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote on last edited by
                              #234

                              Zwillings Four star is great!

                              O 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • S [email protected]

                                Yeah, why do people blow their noses into PAPER when you can just go to the bathroom sink and hork in your hands, and then wash up afterwards??? Why would people walk around with dried boogies on they face when they can wash?? Why? Why, Mister Anderson, why, why?

                                menemen@lemmy.mlM This user is from outside of this forum
                                menemen@lemmy.mlM This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #235

                                Because it is not always possible... Also, take your time to clean the sink afterwards or you might get in trouble.qith you SO (I am speaking out of experience).

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                                • morgan_423@lemmy.worldM [email protected]

                                  I'm going to go with that horrendous, non-absorbent, 1/8th ply toilet paper that gets stocked in public and office bathrooms.

                                  I'm on Team Bidet now, so it doesn't bother me as much as it once did... but the stuff should not exist.

                                  I'm guessing that one day, the people who buy the stuff will figure out that it they're not winning if it costs one-third the price of normal TP when everyone has to use ten times more of it, but who knows when that day will happen. Because it hasn't happened yet.

                                  menemen@lemmy.mlM This user is from outside of this forum
                                  menemen@lemmy.mlM This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #236

                                  Even with a bidet that paper socks. Drying off you ass with it leaves so much paper crumble everywhere that you'll need the bidet again...

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                                  • 7 [email protected]

                                    Just dont try to spray up your ass, its pretty hard but you dont wanna.

                                    But now you only use 3 or for squares of TP to dry off instead of smearing shit all up your asscrack until the point you've been conditioned to believe is clean enough.

                                    One problem though, shitting at your workplace or anywhere else will be insufferable. My LPT is to take one of the better hand towels and wet it in a sink before hitting up a stall. Thank me later.

                                    menemen@lemmy.mlM This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #237

                                    A water bottle with a sport cap is a sufficient travel bidet.

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                                    • D [email protected]

                                      The pumps they sell for coffee syrup dispensers maybe.

                                      sterile_technique@lemmy.worldS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      sterile_technique@lemmy.worldS This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #238

                                      Ooh, that would for sure handle viscosity better than IV tubing. Good call!

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                                      • bpt11@sh.itjust.worksB [email protected]

                                        For example, I'm incredibly confused about how you're supposedly to measure liquid laundry detergent with the cap. At least the kind that I have sits on it's side, so if you measure it with the cap it just leaks everywhere and makes a mess.

                                        Or at my parents house they have a bag of captain crunch berries that has a new design, where instead of zipping along the top of the bag like normal, it has a zipper in the front slightly beneath the top. That way when you poor it you can't see what you're doing cuz the bag is in the way. Like what the heck who's idea was that?

                                        isolatedscotch@discuss.tchncs.deI This user is from outside of this forum
                                        isolatedscotch@discuss.tchncs.deI This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #239

                                        cups, glasses, bowls, anything that doesn't have a spout and makes a mess every time you transfer liquids

                                        Every time I spill something I'm reminded how much better lab glassware is (beakers etc)

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                                        • E [email protected]

                                          Don't use a mist humidifier. They suck. Use an evaporative one and add bacteriostat to the water.

                                          Mine is a tub of water with a wick in it. It has a fan that blows air across the wick. That's it.

                                          J This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #240

                                          i have a venta lw45. same principle, but instead of a wick, it has these rotating disks that the water sticks to (with a little soap in the water). Works incredibly well, still uses next to no energy (<8W) and the disks are super easy to clean. It's a beast, goes through 9 liters of water in a bit over a day. All the parts are easily accessible for maintenance and there's replacement parts if anything ever were to break (though i havent needed those yet).

                                          the disks are especially nice when you have hard water, the calcium can be a pain to remove from a wick, but you can put the venta plastic disks (and lower housing, if you can fit it) in the dishwasher to get them good as new. And calcium does not stick to them weld, so a quick rinse under a strong showerhead is usually enough to clean the disks. Definitely one of the best appliance purchases i ever made.

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