rhythmisaprancer,
@rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social avatar

I don't know how petty you want us to be, but here is my list (some of which has been stated)

  • shoe laces
  • reusable water bottle
  • sunglasses
  • wrist watch

I thought about listing food, and things to eat it on/with, but that would be too much haha. I do use these things daily tho...

bakachu,

Snag Nab-It and an electric depiller (fabric shaver).

Miracle makers during sweater season.

Seraph,
@Seraph@kbin.social avatar

Bidet

b3an,
@b3an@lemmy.world avatar

I think many people assume it’s those seats. Like in Japan… at least I did. But this is not correct, not all of them are. In my country we use these ‘wands’ which work when you turn on the sink faucet. Has a little finger trigger. It’s very convenient, clean. I’ll never go back!!

b3an,
@b3an@lemmy.world avatar
comfy,
@comfy@lemmy.ml avatar
b3an,
@b3an@lemmy.world avatar

Haven’t tried it… 🤣… but if it squirts, it works? 🤔

Bluetreefrog,

Bum gun?

mrbaby,

And great for doing dishes and washing vegetables!

b3an,
@b3an@lemmy.world avatar

Plz no… 😝

Rouxibeau,

In a lot of places, a bidet refers to the whole integrated rig, the $30 under the seat things are washlets and the hand sprayer is advertised as a cloth diaper sprayer.

Senuf,

Back in time, a long time ago, when I was 19 and spent about a year traveling abroad, I learned that a bidet in the bathroom isn’t a standard everywhere. Couldn’t understand why.

s3rvant,
@s3rvant@kbin.social avatar

Love my Luxe!

teamevil,

I just bought one… you’re personally responsible for my absolute joy…or will receive all of my hate. I’ll update

s3rvant,
@s3rvant@kbin.social avatar

Fair warning: this will (further) ruin public restrooms

thanks_shakey_snake,

Seriously-- I kinda wanted one for a long time, but I just assumed they were expensive. They are not. You can install it yourself. If you do so, you will never go back, and it will change your life for the better.

Bidet.

Piecemakers3Dprints,
@Piecemakers3Dprints@lemmy.world avatar

Why did I read this in Ryan Reynolds’ voice? Even had that moment at the end where he looks directly into the camera.

SnipingNinja,

I hate when hotels don’t have bidets, I really wish it was as common as toilets

jvrava9,
@jvrava9@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

A good 10-20k powerbank

ch00f, (edited )

Magnetic soap holder.

You shove a little metal bit into your soap bar, and the bar dangles from a magnet on a stand that holds it over the sink.

Soap dries quickly, no scum in the soap dish, any drippage falls right into the sink.

Only downside is the magnet falls out when the bar gets smaller, so you have to mash the old bar into the bottom of the new one to keep from wasting it.

bakachu,

I’ve never heard of this witchcraft. This is exactly what I need.

Edit: heard not beard

guyrocket,
@guyrocket@kbin.social avatar

Yes beard, not not beard.

ranok,

Pretty niche, but a citrus squeezer. I cook a lot of Asian food and it’s much better to put half a lime in the squeezer at a time than try and hand squeeze the juice out.

BlushedPotatoPlayers,

But… Isn’t that standard equipment in every household?

Shadow,
@Shadow@lemmy.ca avatar

I don’t think I’ve ever seen one.

Turun,

I assume they mean one with some sort of lever to make applying pressure easier?

BlushedPotatoPlayers,

Maybe. We had one of that too, but didn’t use it too much either

Shanedino,

Strongly disagree, any cheap squeezer is way harder to use than a fork and my hand.

fruitSnackSupreme,

That’s what she said.

bi_tux,
@bi_tux@lemmy.world avatar

A keyholder, quite usefull

Dagnet, (edited )

Boneconduction earphones. They are cheaper than you think and I use mine to listen to music while swimming. Also great for music when you need to be able to hear to things around you (it doesn’t block any external sound, so don’t use in noisy environments)

theskyisfalling,

My greatest purchase of the last decade I reckon. I first tried them 9 years ago and since then I am onto my 6th pair, no because they break easily but simply because I use them for between 8 and 10 hours every single day.

I do a lot of running and cycling and they allow me to be aware of idiots in cars whilst being able to listen to music or books whilst I ride / run. I use them at work with ear defense in so I can still hear what my machine is doing.

They are light, comfortable and really just the best way to listen to stuff for me.

Do you use aftershokz?

SocialEngineer56,

Not OP but I do use AdterShokz! I bought them during Black Friday sale last year and love them! I also do a lot of running and cycling - very nice to have the background song playing while also being aware of my surroundings! I also do a lot of late night walks listening to podcasts - I feel much more comfortable knowing I could hear someone approaching me.

I listen when to music / podcasts doing chores around the house. My wife doesn’t realize alot of the times and starts talking to me and I miss first half of what she said. I told my wife when buying them I’d be able to hear her now! Turns out I listen too loud still and can’t comprehend what she is saying when first talking while headphones are still playing. So… don’t use that as buying excuse :)

theskyisfalling,

I don’t know if that is volume based though as I do exactly the same and even when the volume is down low it is like my brain is tuned into listen on that level and so I miss the first sentence of what is said from an outside source. At least I can hear they are there however!

They really are great for so many applications. I used to do Acid a lot more than I do these days and they were fucking great for a trip and out walking in the woods. I could have them on a good volume to soundtrack my walk but whilst also being able to hear nature around me. Just perfect for trippy walks.

Dagnet,

I use a generic one from aliexpress, even the voice alerts are in chinese lol

momentary,

Any particular brand you recommend?

Dagnet,

No idea, I bought a generic one on aliexpress that is ‘good enough’, wouldnt recommend

crabArms,

When I looked into them, a lot of people seem to speak highly of Shokz/aftershokz. I haven’t used them so can’t make a personal recommendation.

One thing to note is that if you want them for swimming you need to get ones with built in storage bc Bluetooth can’t really penetrate water

momentary,

Thanks for the excellent tip, never would have occurred to me that water would cause a problem for the Bluetooth signal!

Mostly_Gristle,

it doesn’t block any external sound, so don’t use in noisy environments

It’s actually because I work in a high noise environment that I got into bone-conduction headphones. They still work when you’re wearing earplugs.

Dagnet,

Nvr thought of that but wouldnt good earbuds with active noise canceling be better for you?

theskyisfalling,

I don’t think that they would be able to cancel the noise of an industrial environment and it would end up being a case of blasting sound into your ears to try and cover up the noise.

These with ear protection saves your ears a lot more.

Mostly_Gristle,

No, it wouldn’t. When I say I work in a high noise environment I mean that I’m surrounded by enough machine noise that I wear ear plugs to protect my hearing. Active noise cancellation isn’t a substitute for actual PPE. It’d be cool if it worked that way, but sadly not.

Bone conduction works great with earplugs though. The only minor downside is that earplugs make the bass frequencies stronger, so I need to open up the EQ settings and tweak things a bit if I’m listening to music, but that’s not really a big deal. I’m usually listing to podcasts or audio books at work anyway.

Death_Equity,

ANC plays the inverse of the soundwaves. So a loud noise isn’t made safe, it is just made inaudible and just as loud and harmful.

They are not safety products, only sound deadening earplugs or muffs do that.

emptiestplace,

that’s … not how science works

:(

aksdb,

Don’t the soundwaves cancel each other out?

Anyway my bigger fear would be a short hiccup or outright malfunction and suddenly you stand unprotected within loud machines.

dustyData,

They do, but not in the intuitive way one would think. They work because there’s a passive seal around the hearing, thus the headphones only have to cancel the smaller amount of noise that gets into your ear, not the full loud noise outside in the environment. This is why ANC need to have mics inside your ears.

The problem is actually that the louder the noise, the louder the noise canceling would have to be. And at a certain point the passive seal cannot stop much of the outside noise, and if poorly designed, if the speaker tries to cancel that noise, it would be blasting massive soundwaves into your ears. But most consumer speakers can’t achieve that and don’t even try. So after a certain threshold, they won’t work and can’t help you with the noise. And the passive noise block is not even remotely good enough as a straight up earplug. So they are not considered protective gear, at least not the consumer devices, only aviation grade ANC is considered protective gear. But you’ll see that they have massive ear cover,s with huge speakers and drivers, and elastic tensors on the headband to absolutely seal your ears and some truly state of the art audio processing that would make the most snob audiophile blush in envy.

They do make some of those for ground crews, construction sites and heavy machinery, but they insists that they are only effective if paired with a sound baffle earplug.

Death_Equity,

Noise cancelling earbuds or similar do not protect your hearing.

They do not make a loud noise quiet. It does not matter if they are working or not. All they do is make noise seem quiet, you are still being exposed to the same level of noise.

aksdb,

Do you have sources backing your claim?

Here is one backing mine: hillhearbetter.com/do-noise-cancelling-headphones…

Death_Equity,

From your source:

While noise-canceling technology can effectively reduce the perception of external sounds, it does not necessarily eliminate the potential for hearing damage.

In noise-canceling headphones, a microphone captures external sounds, and the internal speaker generates a counteracting sound wave that is 180 degrees out of phase. This process effectively nullifies the external sound at ear level. However, it is important to note that the sound pressure from external noise sources still exists even with active noise cancellation in place.

aksdb,

Yes, but you said “seem quiet”. No. It actually cancels the sound waves. So if it’s quiet, it’s quiet. The pressure is a different problem.

GraniteM,

Driving gloves. Some halfway decent calfskin gloves make it nicer to drive, whether the steering wheel is hot in the summer, cold in the winter, or if you’re going to be driving long distance. Not sure if real leather will be less than $20, but seen some cheap fingerless work gloves make driving more comfortable.

Clip on sunglasses that fit on my eyeglasses. Super easy to clip on, cost about ten bucks. So nice to not have to squint as much.

Dim light bulbs. Nearly every bulb in my house is as dim as I can manage. Some are salt lamps and some are those flicker fire bulbs. Either way, it makes the light at night a little warmer and a little dimmer, and all around a lot more cozy, which really is what one wants. Keep a couple of the overhead bulbs at the brighter end in case you need them, but dimmer bulbs make me a lot happier at night.

pHr34kY,

I got a new house with LEDs and at night it’s lit like a 7-Eleven. I feel it’s part of the reason I never get to sleep before midnight.

Rouxibeau,

Dimmable smart bulbs, a mix of white and RGB.

morphballganon,

Use daily? Very few things.

I guess shower head with hose? The advantage is the water comes at you from a higher point, great for tall/medium height people like me.

pHr34kY,

OMG those are amazing for hosing down the shower walls or washing your dog.

iturnedintoanewt,
@iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee avatar

USB cables with LCD displays. Now i can easily understand if a device is properly using QC or PD when charging, or whether there is an issue.

saltesc,

Carabiners. I bought a bunch for accessory and gear hauling when climbing long routes/distances. They’ve since been used for a lot more. I find endless use for them and usually have one clipped on a belt eyelet.

learningduck,

Don’t have an egg beater? Here’s my carabiner.

Do you mind sharing how you apply those fears outside of climbing?

saltesc,

Well, just earlier I used two to extend a dog lead and tether it at the pub.

In sight of me, a couple are looped through jacket tags holding them onto a skinny rack clothes hangers don’t fit on. My house keys hang off a small one so I can clip them on and off my car key and 4×4 key. I clip on lock keys as well if I’m going mountain biking. Another has a dog training clicker and treat bag on the outside of my backpack. There’s a few holding up shoes and accessory ropes on my outdoor/climbing gear rack.

Other common things, though… Holding up things like lighting, bins, cooking stuff when I camp. Clipping through tied up bin bags so I can take them all outside easier and cleaner—basically anything with a small loop, they become a clip in handle. They’re great for undoing tight knots instead of finger nails. Switching weights in and out of my harness for different exercises on the pull-up bar or hangboard.

Most situations needing a handle, hook, ring, or knot, but faster and easier. I have a lot of very strong climbing ones, but decent ones that’ll statically handle up to 100kg—but try not to ever go half the Max static rating for safety—are light, tough, and very cheap.

That should give you plenty of ideas to work with :)

Aussiemandeus,
@Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone avatar

Knipex adjustable shifter pliers

They adjust and lock to all the metric sizes and in my industry climbing towers and working at heights, having to carry the minimum is amazing.

these

lazylion_ca,

Is there a tower climbers community on Lemmy?

Aussiemandeus,
@Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone avatar

I’m not sure, i climb tower cranes for work

polle,

LOL, are you me? I recently put that thing in my backpack, because you never know.

RubberElectrons,
@RubberElectrons@lemmy.world avatar

Faaacts, I have one at work and a personal one. Can one buy tools accidentally? I needed to get a bike head-nut off, all it had were two parallel indents on the perimeter.

Saw this for $50 at Sears, been in love with them ever since. W/o question one of my favorite and most useful tools. Sheesh I sound like such a shill haha

macrocephalic,

I have the knippex 100mm pliers, they are part of my EDC but they’re not $20.

silentknyght,

What do you do that you carry special pliers every day?

macrocephalic,

Exist. I have kids who constantly break things. I have a house where things often need minor attention. The knippex cobra xs pliers are tiny and weigh less than the pliers on a multitool like a Leatherman.

Thorny_Insight,

Great tool but not cheap. Infact you probably couldn’t find a more expensive version. Knipex however is worth it. Generally my advice is to first buy a cheap tool and replace it with more expensive one after it breaks but with pliers it’s pay once, cry once situation. These are truly BIFL tools. The 100mm mini cobra pliers are awesome aswell.

Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Good nail clippers. My toe nails grow hella fast and if I don’t keep 'em trimmed, I end up spending a lot more on socks. Good trimmer is like $5. Though I wish they came in bright colors since I quite often misplace them or they fall off my night stand and are a PITA to find.

Waldemar_Firehammer,

Plastidip the handles, you can get bright blue or yellow pretty easily, and one can will last ages.

Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

That’s a good idea. Would also give a better grip on the lever. :D

Vodik_VDK,

A slim beater knife like the Buck 722 Spitfire (had mine for almost a decade).

multi-chambered pill fob; bulk caffeine pills.

A quality water bottle.

Bamboo sheets (soft, smooth, anti-static)

Waldemar_Firehammer,

Bamboo sheets (soft, smooth, anti-static)

There’s a store in the mall where I live that sells any size bamboo sheet sets with an extra pillowcase for $25. They are amazing and I’ve since converted all my family to them.

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