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  3. What is the oldest thing you own that you still use daily?

What is the oldest thing you own that you still use daily?

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  • K [email protected]

    How? We have stairs like this near a few pubs and restaurants. Though made of metal.

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    wrote last edited by [email protected]
    #161

    If you tripped, there's not much to grab onto, and it looks both steep and very uneven.

    I would have no problem climbing this myself. Habitually climbing it carelessly and/or while burdened would present some risk, though, and it's probably not going to be great for grandma. We don't build like this anymore out of inclusion, a higher level of value on life and just not wanting or needing to have architecture that requires skill to use.

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    • A [email protected]

      My violin was made in 1614, but to be honest I use my practice violin daily and use that as my concert violin, and tune and play it weekly.

      evilcartyen@feddit.dkE This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote last edited by
      #162

      Expensive piece of kit! I assume you're a professional musician?

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      • A [email protected]

        Alarm clock I bought at the end of 2006 or early 2007. About 18 years ago

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        wrote last edited by
        #163

        Hmm, do you literally only own things you bought new?

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        • C [email protected]

          1640s here!

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          wrote last edited by [email protected]
          #164

          .uk

          What, it's not built on a Roman wall? Boooring. /s

          It's crazy to me how commonplace truly deep history is over the pond. Like, there's been multiple different cities in the same place at different times, basically.

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          • W [email protected]

            kitchen radio. It is one of the first portable tube radios, built 1958 or 1968 (dont remember). Internals died a few times, retro-fitted by a UKW radio receiver, then an MP3 player, now its a Raspi radio. It runs most of the time if I am at home

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            wrote last edited by
            #165

            I still have a clock radio from the 1970s around. No repairs needed, it's amazing the difference no moving parts makes.

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            • M [email protected]

              Apparently we are just the brain and eyeballs(and female gonads) piloting a meat sack of Theseus.

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              wrote last edited by [email protected]
              #166

              I'm guessing metabolism causes the matter in a brain cell to turn over pretty often, even, and new neurons continue to grow throughout your life. Tooth enamel is the only part I know you can be reasonably sure is the same atoms as it's always been. Eye lenses might have some chemically durable portion, I suppose.

              A person is like a river. Always the same thing, but always changing.

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              • inenduringgrowstrong@sh.itjust.worksI [email protected]

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                wrote last edited by
                #167

                You lucky bastard!

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                • hmmm@sh.itjust.worksH [email protected]

                  My Laptop from 2009 still works like a charm

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                  wrote last edited by [email protected]
                  #168

                  You have me beat by a bit if you're still daily driving it. OS support is getting hard, though.

                  Wirth's law seems to have passed Moore's law sometime around 2010. Or maybe we just ran out of non-gaming problems that are computationally hard. Either way, hardware from the time that isn't physically broken is still quite usable, if you've escaped from the proprietary software treadmill.

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                  • L [email protected]

                    A stove spatula my mom had in the 1940s. Not daily but I use it routinely. I hand wash it instead of putting it through the dishwasher.

                    We also have my wife's grandmother's old, completely out-of-tune standup piano. Nobody in our house plays piano. We use it to take up space, accumulate clutter, and make sure that area of the room is unusable.

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #169

                    I read that as "stone spatula" and thought that thing was ancient

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                    • M [email protected]

                      Just wondering what passes the test of time? I personally have an old Casio watch and if you count fruit trees, those are pretty old too.

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #170

                      I've got this little blue plastic cup I've had for almost 30 years. Use it for my toothbrush. Got it when I was a kid and it's the only toothbrush holder I've ever had since.

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                      • A [email protected]

                        Hah! I don't know if it's because of how old the wood is, but it's not very splintery, it has a smooth fossilised feel even though it's so uneven.

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #171

                        Yeah, I'm sure anything that would have splintered off already has by now with how worn it looks. It shouldn't be an issue now unless a chunk breaks off.

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                        • morgunkorn@discuss.tchncs.deM [email protected]

                          Most of it is a decade old at best ^^

                          sauce: https://book.bionumbers.org/how-quickly-do-different-cells-in-the-body-replace-themselves/

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                          wrote last edited by [email protected]
                          #172

                          .

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                          • C [email protected]

                            Hmm, do you literally only own things you bought new?

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                            wrote last edited by
                            #173

                            The question was about what I use daily.

                            The oldest thing I own is an end table from late 70s. Don’t use it very often though

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                            • A [email protected]

                              I went downstairs and took one just for you:

                              His thing was that he didn't want obvious electric lights in the lobby because Aztecs didn't have electric lights. But it was decided that giant glass columns in earthquake country in the 20s was a bad idea, so they didn't do it

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                              wrote last edited by
                              #174

                              Aww, that's a shame they didn't go through with it. I don't see why it would be an issue structurally. You'd just need to build the structural spiller in the center, then put lights around that, then glass around that. LEDs would make this so much easier, but it still should have been doable. You could even make the glass "floating" so the floor/ceiling shaking wouldn't break it.

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                              • C [email protected]

                                Hmm, probably cookware from the 1960's. Furniture too, if that counts. It's possible something in the kitchen is actually a generation older, although I'm not sure.

                                If you include decorations as opposed to just tools it goes back almost arbitrarily (I have 19th century heirlooms, pre-settlement arrowheads and Cambrian period fossils), but I think the spirit of the question is more about things finding a totally pragmatic application.

                                Edit: I also have a touch-sensitive lamp of a similar age to the cookware. I'm not sure how it works exactly, but I'm guessing the entire exterior is one big capacitor, and it must have a very early transistor inside to switch it. It's not quite used daily, but it's sure interesting.

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                                wrote last edited by
                                #175

                                Obligatory Technology Connections

                                https://youtu.be/TbHBHhZOglw

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                                • A [email protected]

                                  The question was about what I use daily.

                                  The oldest thing I own is an end table from late 70s. Don’t use it very often though

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                                  wrote last edited by [email protected]
                                  #176

                                  Ah, okay. There has to be someone out there that's fully in this material century like that.

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                                  • C [email protected]

                                    Mmm, delicious non OSHA-compliance. No handrails, no problem!

                                    I'm fascinated with those joints. Are they nailed at all, or is it just held together by gravity, friction and the exterior walls?

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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #177

                                    No nails, gravity and large wooden stakes / dowels. It's amazing to me that people made this by hand, and by the looks of it it was some exquisite craftsmanship, but it's still functional hundreds of years later, unlike most things created today.

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                                    • obi@sopuli.xyzO [email protected]

                                      Can it still receive regular radio too?

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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #178

                                      Yup absolutely. FM and AM, thats why I had it restored.

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                                      • T [email protected]

                                        Obligatory Technology Connections

                                        https://youtu.be/TbHBHhZOglw

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                                        wrote last edited by [email protected]
                                        #179

                                        Huh, very cool! Nobody in the family could remember where mine actually came from. Nobody else knew enough about electronics to be impressed by how old it is, either. Actually I'm lucky it came up.

                                        There's no markings I can see. If Alladin had a patent on it maybe that would be the place to start looking for the model.

                                        There's no mechanical relay I can hear and no tube warmup period, but on the other hand it has no boot period and it does behave oddly depending on the quality of mains power (so analog). The person who almost certainly bought it died in the 1970's.

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                                        • M [email protected]

                                          Just wondering what passes the test of time? I personally have an old Casio watch and if you count fruit trees, those are pretty old too.

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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #180

                                          I have a washcloth I got when I was like 6.. I’m almost 40. It’s a really nice mesh washcloth and somehow it only has one extra hole that shouldn’t be there, as well as a seam for the edging that needs to be fixed.

                                          I’ve used it almost daily for my face that whole time.

                                          But the oldest thing I have that I sort of technically use is a wheelchair from WWI. It functions as a chair in my living room. I don’t really think it counts, being furniture, though.

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