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FunkyMonk ,

Fidget cube, helps me get through boring but informitive youtube content.

beSyl ,

Care to share a link please?

whoisearth ,
@whoisearth@lemmy.ca avatar

There’s millions but here’s an example on Amazon.

PTX Products Matte White and Neon Green Fidget Cube a.co/d/4lLZJry

Note there’s more than a cube. As someone with two ADHD boys and myself with ADHD there’s lots of options and they’re almost all cheap just find what works for you

dan ,
@dan@upvote.au avatar

Yes! I have so much random junk I’ve fidgeted with on my desk, and a fidget cube really helps.

Wahots , (edited )
@Wahots@pawb.social avatar

Bidet for sure. A good one in the $300-400 range. It is such a gamechanger to always have a clean ass. And without TP, the toilet never clogs and you aren’t spending extra on TP. Also helps with hemorrhoids if/when you get those, as TP is really rough on your asshole/not good for you.

I still have some TP for guests, but with the dryer built in, it really isn’t needed.

Also, a bidet is a lifesaver if you like extreme hotsauces. Basically, it’s the only piece of daily furniture that makes me go “God, I’m so glad I bought this” for literal years since I got it in the pandemic. No cold toilet seat during winter. Heated seat that doesn’t slam. Hot water. Hot air blow dryer. Self-cleaning.

TXinTXe ,
@TXinTXe@lemmy.ml avatar

Well, you can spend 300-400 or you can buy a “portable bidet bottle” and clean your asshole with warm water. You’ll still need to use some toilet paper (or maybe a towel) to dry, but you’ll be spending $15 more or less and you can carry it with you when you travel.

sxan ,
@sxan@midwest.social avatar

Have you ever used one of these? I thought about getting one for backpacking trips; TP becomes a major consideration on those, and - frankly - I often have all the time in the world to wait, and airdry, and enjoy the view. At least, on summer trips. But I’ve wondered how well they work in practice.

businessfish ,
@businessfish@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

i have a backpacking bidet (culo clean specifically) and I would say it gives mixed results. basically, you need to practice and develop a technique to “get the most” out of it in terms of water usage, how clean you can get, etc. I don’t have a normal bidet so i have nothing to compare it with and maybe my technique isnt so good. mine gets me mostly clean but i still need a square of toilet paper to make sure in almost every case. better than not having it, but not the results I was hoping for.

TXinTXe ,
@TXinTXe@lemmy.ml avatar

I’ve been using a 0.5L one for years now. Usually it’s enough, but there are times that when I dry (with toilet paper) I see that I need a little more cleaning and then I either finish with the paper or refill the bottle and try again.

zzzzzz ,

How well do they self-clean? How often do you need to clean it manually?

Wahots ,
@Wahots@pawb.social avatar

I’ve cleaned it twice just to feel good about it, but it’s been sparkling aside from some hard water deposits, which came off pretty easily. It always runs water over it after use, and the nozzle angle is so steep, it doesn’t get poo on it. I have a toto one. (I’ve had mine since about mid 2021)

I still clean the toilet seat and the underside of the seat though, which can get a bit of pee on it if you’re a guy. I’m a bit of a clean freak too, so when I say clean, I mean clean, lol.

Aarrodri ,

Came to say bidet, but I have the poor man version … 25 at Amazon. I suffer Everytime I have to go back to only tp when not at home. I feel like a savage caveman without one. Smearing poop is just nasty and uncivilized to me. I have used the fancy ones in Japan but really did not like the warm water. I prefer the shocking cold glaciar feeling of butt refreshes. To anyone reading this…get a bidet, ANY KIND… Try cleaning up peanutbutter from your arm with just paper to experience what we talking about .

Adalast ,

Steam Deck. Without question. I don’t think I would have been able to cope with the last year and a half of my life without it. This year has been very rough and I have been able to escape life while still spending time with my family. Top-tier psychological maintenance for me.

bjoern_tantau ,
@bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de avatar

Same. Long Covid has me tied to my bed and with the Steam Deck I can at least get some gaming to pass the time. It’s awesome!

ExLisper ,

InstaPot. It makes a lot of things so much easier to cook. Rice, lentils, potatoes, eggs… I use it mostly for that. No need to stand there stirring, looking at the clock. Fire and forget and always perfectly cooked.

tankplanker ,

I love mine, if for nothing more than making my porridge on a timer so it’s ready for when I get up in the morning

victorz ,

Modern induction hobs usually have built-in timers and boil sensing, which is nice. No need for an extra appliance.

ExLisper ,

I don’t think is the same. I’ve used pressure cooker with induction plate and it’s just not as easy and precise as instapot

victorz ,

Ah okay, my mistake. Maybe I misunderstood what an Instapot actually does, or what kind of product it is. Should’ve looked it up before commenting.

CCatMan ,

Totally

Roflmasterbigpimp ,
@Roflmasterbigpimp@lemmy.world avatar

Refillable Salt and Pepper-Mills. I can “feel” now how much Salt or Peper I add to something.

Shurimal ,

Probably it doesn't quite count as a gadget, but repurposing my old PC as a home server. Firstly it makes a great mass storage solution making all my media accessible from any device, no matter what architecture it is and what apps it can run. I also self-host Home Assistant, Syncthing, Radicale, Navidrome, Jellyfin and UrBackup. The ten years old 2 core Pentium with 8GB of RAM can do it all, it's much cheaper to run than half a dozen subscription services and I have total control over my data and privacy.

June ,

I recently picked up a 13 year old dell inspiron to run my instance of home assistant and Plex. It was an upgrade from a shitty old Linux laptop that was literally falling apart. All I had to do was add ram (it only had 6gb and it wasn’t stable, so I maxed it out with 16gb) and I swapped the old slow HDD for a crucial SATA SSD and it’s been perfect. It probably pulls more wattage than necessary but it’s exactly what I need for now.

TimewornTraveler ,

wow that’s amazing. so it’s connected to all other PCs in the house? did you have to buy a lot of new storage?

Shurimal ,

I actually bought just one new 6TB HDD and repurposed an older 3TB one as a redundancy drive for mirroring most critical data using a simple rsync cron job (no need for realtime mirroring of media files that are write-once), plus another old 1 TB drive just because. I haven't run out of storage yet and I have automated download/sharing for OpenStreetMap and some Linux distros which takes up half a TB or so, but I plan on expanding the array using MergerFS and SnapRAID when the need arises.

The rest is just SMB shares, Navidrome, Jellyfin, DLNA and FTP. Remote access from outside my local network is done via Tailscale VPN.

USER001 ,

What benefits do you see in navidrome compared to having your music in Jellyfin? I’m just starting out with jellyfin and added some music to it. I listen to it with findroid on my phone and so far it seems to work okay.

Shurimal ,

Navidrome just seems to be faster and more responsive. But the main reason of using both is that I just like to try things out and tinker. I also use Foobar2000, Kodi, MPC-HD, AIMP and other media players.

USER001 ,

What benefits do you see in navidrome compared to having your music in Jellyfin? I’m just starting out with jellyfin and added some music to it. I listen to it with findroid on my phone and so far it seems to work okay.

Scrath ,

I’m not the guy you replied to.

I originally stored my music in Plex and used Plexamp. I have a large playlist downloaded from youtube which caused horrible performance issues in Plexamp. Navidrome is pretty much a read-only service. It can only read metadata from the files, not add any or manage them. For me this feels safer to expose to the internet since my docker container only has read-only access to all of my files. Even if someone broke into the service for some reason, they couldn’t do anything to my files.

I don’t know if jellyfin has similar performance issues with large playlists since I already had navidrome set up by then.

USER001 ,

Thanks! I don’t have too much music on it yet, I guess, so not sure on the performance. I do like that read only approach, though. Currently I’m running just the regular jellyfin app on my Mac. What made you use it in docker? It sounds like in Linux it’s a safeguard to prevent dependency issues but I don’t think that’s really a factor on mac

Scrath ,

Mostly ease of management. I have a server on which I run multiple applications. If I don’t need something anymore, I can just purge the container. The directories used by that container are clearly listed in my docker-compose file so I never have to wonder whether I purged everything that is now unnecessary.

It also makes it very easy to deploy a new service.

protput ,

I bought a cheap low power minipc. Don’t know the numbers but having a 10yo desktop powered 27/7 can’t be that great for your power consumption.

The one I bought is an Intel Alder Lake N100 Quad Core up to 3.4GHZ, 16GB DDR5 512GB for €160.

tankplanker ,

A smart switch for my espresso machine so it turns on a timer each morning so it’s ready for when I get up, it takes about 25 minutes to fully warm up. Also I can turn it on or off using voice controls, great when I want another coffee later in the day.

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

Is it a Switch bot?

If so, quick question: Does it need a hub? Or can I just but the switch, install an app for it, then couple it with a home assistant?

pipe01 ,

The most common ones use WiFi, so you don’t need any hubs other than a router.

tankplanker ,

No, its a smart thing switch as I have the hub, so its z wave. However I have a lot of smart home switches, lights and so on so that makes sense for me. Plenty of options if you do not want a hub now.

The espresso machine has a proper on off button so I just leave it in on position and the switch turns the power on and off

beSyl ,

Damn, that is a slow espresso machine. Mine takes like 1min.

Also, would that work for devices that need to have the “on” button pressed in order to turn on?

For example: Say I unplug one of my devices, while turned on. If I plug them again in the outlet, they will be turned off and I will have to turn them on again, even though they were on when I unplugged them.

Bakkoda ,

My Bambino was ready in minutes. My Profitec Go takes a while. Very very dependent on the model. I wouldn’t go back to the Bambino at all

I use two Zooz Zen15 with both my Moccamaster and Profitec. Been absolutely wonderful.

dan ,
@dan@upvote.au avatar

What don’t you like about the Bambino?

Bakkoda ,

It’s great! Just ready for an upgrade and I’ve redone the kitchen recently and I came in under budget so why not? PID for me!

sxan ,
@sxan@midwest.social avatar

They might have a different style. I have one of these, and it definitely takes 20 minutes or so to get up to pressure.

I didn’t think about a smart switch, like GP. That’s a slick idea. OTOH, I turn the machine on and go do something else for a few minutes - I don’t find it an imposition.

tankplanker ,

Majority of any e61 espresso machine is like that, pretty much par for the course for anything other than budget non e61 or some of the new high end espresso machines that use some variation of electrically heated groups.

Mine will be “ready” after about 15 minutes but as an e61 group head is a heavy block it takes along time to get good thermal stability. Difference is I can steam and extract shots at the same time with 2bar steam and 9bar espresso, shot after shot.

My espresso machine has a proper on/off switch, so I just leave that set to on and control the power from the smart switch.

catastrophicblues ,

It’s more about getting the portafilter hot too.

As for the on button, I use a SwitchBot Bot.

NENathaniel ,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

I went with the Breville machines mostly cause they’re fully ready in like 3-30 seconds

tankplanker ,

They nice machines but I wanted more consistent with its pressure and water flow, better steaming, not made by breville,and made with industry standard components that can last decades.

NENathaniel ,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

I can’t speak to lasting decades but, for the price, I am quite happy with the quality of the coffee & steaming.

I’ve had mine for 2 years and zero issues, hoping I’ll get another 5+ out of it

tankplanker ,

It’s a decent machine for the money but compared to its competitors from gaggia and rancilio what they lose in fancy programming or the pid or the easy steaming (which is still way off mine) they gain in actually having an opv (depending which one you have), build quality and self service.

I’ve seen far too many people have issues with breville stuff and then problems returning it. It’s not that good ones don’t exist it’s just that more reliable does.

To put your seven years into perspective I should be getting 30 to 40 years out of mine with some regular servicing.

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

Last time I needed new headphones for going out, I bought a Shockz bone conducting headphone.

While the specific one I bought was the wrong choice (the Run I got is slick but needs a proprietary charging cable instead of the USB-C the Move uses, and they sound 100% the same), overall the concept is really good. I enjoy hearing people around me, for someone who more listens to podcasts and radio shows not music the quality is perfect, and I can wear these on my bicycle without having to worry I won’t hear something.

Also, since they don’t sit in the ear not enclose it it’s easy to semi-forget them there as they’re so comfortable, no stuffed feeling or sweaty ears. I sometimes just use them at home instead of shifting a podcast onto the sonos speakers. Just easier.

whoisearth ,
@whoisearth@lemmy.ca avatar

I’ve heard of these for a while and general question for you and anyone else who’s looked. What are the red flags? Nothing comes without risks and years of research has shown the hearing damage from traditional headphones. There has to be a rub with these. What are the negative rumblings of using these style of headphones. They have to be there. We just don’t have the decades of research yet.

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

If I now say that your premise is wrong (headphones don’t cause hearing loss, loud noises do, independent of the source), does that automatically answer your question? 😛

Now to dig a bit deeper into that, there is a lot of research into MIHL from using PLDs, and the key thing is always people turning up the volume higher than they normally would, usually due to the context of where they are. That is, we use our little headphones in noisy environments, and to drown out the noise we turn them up too much and start damaging our ears over time.

In that regard, bone conduction headsets are worse. They are intentionally fully open, and don’t in the slightest bit try to reduce ambient noise. That is, if anything you’d be tempted to crank them up even higher.

I will however say that the models I’ve used all came with an interesting “safety” in this regard that stems from the way they work: At a certain and not that loud noise level, they start vibrating physicially off the skin during playback, in turn plateauing the achievable volume. I suspect however that this level is already beyond healthy.

So, in other words:
If you’re concerned about hearing loss, keep the volume in sane reaches. If you also need to ignore outside noise while listening, this means getting enclosing and/or noise-cancelling headphones, not open ones like bone conducting. However, if keeping the volume low, say during listening at home, bone conduction is no different from other forms of receiving audio, both still stimulate the hearing canal hairs.

sxan , (edited )
@sxan@midwest.social avatar

Yeah, I love my ANC earbuds. In pass-through mode, I can hear ambient sounds almost better than I can without them, especially on a bike where I can tune them to blank wind noise but allow voices and bells. And you’re right about not needing high volume to hear music well. They have great sound quality, and the ANC is indispensible on airplanes.

The downside is cost; GP’s bone-conducting headset is $90, and the other pair they mention is $60. A good pair of ANC earbuds starts around $200, and some of the better pairs are upwards of $300.

Worth the money, IMO, but if $60 is all you can afford, GP’s might be the better bet than super sketchy-quality cheap ANC earbuds.

root ,

Agreed 100%.

Before I got my noise cancelling headphones, I was very aware of the volume that I have set when trying to watch a movie in a plane. After I got the noise cancelling headphones, I no longer have to set it that loud anymore.

That said, some airlines need to relook their volumes of their PA system. Some of them are shockingly louder than necessary. Lol

Mostly_Gristle ,

Yes. I love mine. I originally got some bone-conduction headphones to use at my job because I work in a high noise environment and they still work while you’re wearing earplugs, but I use them pretty much constantly now. It’s really nice to have my music or podcasts and still be able to hear when someone asks me a question, or to be able to hear traffic coming if I’m out walking or jogging.

I’ve had a couple pairs of them now and weirdly bone-conduction headphones seem to be the one electronic device that under promises on its battery life. I don’t know if maybe I just got lucky, but the cheap no name set I got off Amazon promised 5 hours, but even after a year still regularly lasts 8 or 9. My Shokz Open Run Pros promise 10 hours, and I routinely get 15 or 16 hours. So that’s nice.

hessenjunge ,

Out of curiosity: did you ever test noise cancelling headsets in that high noise environment? I’d think that in-ear and over-ear nc headphones should work quite well too.

Mostly_Gristle ,

No, because active noise cancellation doesn’t offer any hearing protection. It doesn’t make the noise go away, it works by sending out an extra soundwave which is a mirror inversion of noise to be cancelled, sends out peaks where there were troughs and troughs where there were peaks, and they cancel each other out as far as your brain is concerned. But to work the destructive soundwave has to be as loud as the sound it’s cancelling, and now you have two sound waves blasting away, still moving air and putting pressure on your eardrums, and it’s that pressure causes the damage to your hearing.

Proper PPE has a passive barrier that physically blocks the bulk of the vibration from reaching your eardrums in the first place. Active noise cancellation does kind of the opposite of that.

RaoulDook ,

What’s the frequency response like on those? Can you hear low-end bass in a way that sounds good?

get_off_the_phone ,

7

TheWeirdestCunt ,

I got it as a present rather than buying it myself but my tire pressure / tread depth measuring tool gets near constant use so it’s super easy to check on my car’s tires when I need to

mertn , (edited )

A soil moisture measuring device to tell when plants need watering. 2 for $10 on amazon.

Gpinmg ,

I bought one too andI love mine. I feel like my plants like it too!

LuckyBoy ,

Do they really work?

monobot ,

Why wouldn’t they? It just measures electrical resistance of the soil, less moisture means more resistance. Nice and simple.

I have cheap one connected to arduino, and small water pump conected to it too. It works nicely.

LuckyBoy ,

The soil composition, minerals and nutrients can change the eletrical resistance. Thats what i read somewhere.

mertn ,

Yes they work well. No batteries needed. They give clear indication of dry/moist/soggy. I was over-watering and killing plants before I bought one.

SuiXi3D ,
@SuiXi3D@kbin.social avatar

Years ago I got one of those iRig guitar input jacks for my iPhone. Having a wealth of tones and a basic DAW available to me for the first time really did a lot to help me expand my playing ability.

guriinii ,

Robot vacuum. Autistic and ADHD and could never keep on top of keeping my floor clean. But I can now!

themoonisacheese ,
@themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works avatar

Been looking at these for a while but I can’t seem to decide on one, any suggestions?

13esq ,

I’ve had a look, not purchased, but watched a lot of review videos and I’d recommend you to do the same as no one here is going to have really tried all the different models available.

Unfortunately, the price does seem to correlate with the quality and performance and the most expensive auto vacuums cost in the £300 region. They also will never be as powerful as a traditional upright, can’t do stairs and of course you still have to empty them and take them up and down the stairs to do the different floors of your house. But yh, the price is the biggest reason I’ve not gotten one myself.

corsicanguppy ,

yh

Dereference this?

Khanzarate ,

It means “yeah”

MashedPotatoJeff ,

I had Neatos for years. They worked great until they didn’t; I always had to do a lot of troubleshooting. Now I have a Wyze vacuum, which I think is a rebrand of a larger Chinese brand. It doesn’t clean as well as the Neatos, but it’s had no problems so far, and it was much cheaper.

There’s plenty of reviews out there if you want to get into it, and it does seem like some of the more expensive ones out there have some really nice features. But if you’ve been on the fence for a while my advice is to pick a well reviewed affordable one and go for it.

Once you have something cleaning your floors you’ll have more time to research which one is the ultimate vacuum.

Machindo ,

Roborock S8+ with the dock is awesome. It’s a straight upgrade from the last gen flagship Roomba.

Way better mapping and battery life.

us.roborock.com/pages/roborock-s8

catastrophicblues ,

I have a Roomba j7+ and I love it. I also have a Braava Jet M6, so mopping is taken care of too. The mopping is slow, but it’s quiet and it’s not like I have to wait for it.

CerineArkweaver ,

I personally like the Eufy brand ones. Bonus, they are in my experience very repairable and the company sells spare parts at reasonable prices 😊

hessenjunge ,

Get a Valetudo supported one. There’s no need to share your room layout with random strangers. I’d get one of newer ones from Dreame.

Aarrodri ,

These free up so much time. Love mine too. I cook a lot and mess around a lot in the open kitchen/living room area and had to sweep the floor daily…not anymore.

the16bitgamer ,
@the16bitgamer@lemmy.world avatar

An Ice Cream Maker. Been making my own Ice Cream for years now and its amazing. The cheap machines which requires you to freeze the bowl is nice, but the one with a heat pump built in is amazing. In 3 hours I can make batches of Mint, Chocolate and Vanilla Ice Cream.

CaptainPedantic ,

Woah! I didn’t know they made heat pump ice cream makers (for non commercial users) at a decent price.

the16bitgamer ,
@the16bitgamer@lemmy.world avatar

Amazon sells them with the search term “with compressor”. I got this one 2 years ago, it’s pricey but you can get smaller ones with less volume for cheaper. www.amazon.ca/dp/B01FXMW4AS/

Aarrodri ,

I love kitchen gadgets and thought to myself… dang! Will get one… then saw 600… I don’t eat that much icecream lol…

the16bitgamer ,
@the16bitgamer@lemmy.world avatar

I found the $600 to be reasonable considering how much I make. But they do sell smaller ones for 200-300 the bowl just has a smaller volume.

Chetzemoka ,

Swapped out the head unit on my 2016 car for a touchscreen that supports Android Auto. I got spoiled using a similar one in my friend’s rental car. It was only $600 installed at Best Buy. It’s so nice not to have to fight with keeping my phone in a display holder where I can see the map, and now I can control my phone-streamed music with my steering wheel controls. Makes driving so much more pleasant.

dan , (edited )
@dan@upvote.au avatar

I did this too around five years ago, but I installed it myself rather than paying for installation. I bought it from Crutchfield and they provided very good instructions.

It’s harder to do in newer cars though, since the head unit has more of the car’s systems going through it. Mine (2012 Mazda 3) only uses the head unit for what you’d expect - the radio, door/seatbelt chimes, and steering wheel controls.

beastlykings ,

I did this last month in my 04 Honda CRV, such a massive upgrade. I don’t have steering wheel controls, and I didn’t want to tap a screen for volume control, so I went with the boss be7acp because it has a physical volume knob. Added a backup camera because why not.

It’s been a massive upgrade! Crutchfield is the bomb, installation wasn’t that hard, a bit fiddly getting to the wires for the backup and park, but I was done in a couple hours, backup camera included.

Iceblade02 ,

The cheaper version - an fm radio transmitter that connects to your phone via bluetooth.

Costs 20$ and takes zero installation.

deezbutts ,

Doesn’t give nav display and as much hands free though

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