• Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    6 days ago

    Its very hard to sell a product based on it being “reliable” and “good quality”. This is because everyone fucking lies in their marketing about those exact qualities and its inevitable that you will get breakdowns and your customers will complain about those breakdowns and destroy your reputation.

    Everything is fake now. Its just a matter of using marketing to tell the customer your product is exactly what they want.

  • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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    11 days ago

    This often actually exists still, but those companies dont do big marketing and their products will cost 3x that of a “normal” one.

    • 𝕾𝖕𝖎𝖈𝖞 𝕿𝖚𝖓𝖆@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      As I’ve heard it:

      • Bosch makes the best dishwashers
      • Speed Queen makes the best laundry machines
      • Asko and Miele make the best stoves and fridges

      And yes, they are all very expensive. But I want to get me a Speed Queen so bad.

      • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Miele was sold to a private equity firm and they’ve been reputation-fracking, so their recent stuff is supposed to be pretty mediocre but priced as if it’s top-end.

          • FackCurs@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            For those like me who actually didn’t know: Initial Public Offering. It’s the first time (initial) the company sells shares (offering) on public stock exchanges. Aka: they went public.

            • merc@sh.itjust.works
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              10 days ago

              In addition, in a well functioning economy, companies only go public when they want to raise a lot of new money, because they have ambitious plans that can’t be achieved with their current sources of funding. Now, really, that’s bullshit. Companies mostly go public because the insiders want to cash out. Going public allows them to sell their shares for actual money. But, still, in theory the company should be going public with a story about how they’re going to use all the new funds they’re raising, otherwise they (in theory) won’t be able to con people into investing.

              The end result of going public is that the company is no longer in the control of the founders or even the early investors. Now it has a bunch of public investors who don’t care about the company culture, don’t care about the relationships with the employees or the customers. They just want to see a 15% year-over-year growth in the value of their stocks. That means that pretty often once a company goes public its products or services start to suffer, because you can make more money by squeezing suppliers, finding the cheapest parts, outsourcing jobs, etc.

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        It’s kind of crazy that like heating air is not perfectly mastered in every stove, heating and pumping water in every dishwasher and laundry machine etc. It’s very simple stuff after all.

        How fuckin cheap du you have to be to make a non perfect machine 🤷🏻‍♀️?!

        • cogman@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          For stoves, the thing that breaks is the control board. Hot + electronics is bad.

          An induction stove avoids most of that problem because the hot happens in the pot and not inside the stove.

          But I agree, there’s not much reason a stove can’t last 50 years. In fact, my parents have a 50 year old resistive stove that still works.

          Washers have the most to go wrong of things you listed.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            10 days ago

            the hot happens in the pot and not inside the stove

            The pot is sitting on the stove. And induction involves electromagnetism, which means it involves metal pots and pans, and metal loops of wire to induce current in that cookware. Metal parts conduct heat very well. So, induction stoves don’t get quite as hot as conventional stoves. But, they still get very hot because they have a hot metal pot sitting on them.

            Also, while induction stoves don’t get quite as hot as other kinds of stoves, they involve large currents and large amounts of magnetism. That means both stress on the electrical parts, and mechanical stress from the magnets.

            Overall, I’d guess that an induction stove is probably going to have fewer things that can go wrong with it than a gas stove, a glass-top stove or an olde fashioned electrical resistance stove. But, it isn’t like an LED light or something that should last decades because there’s no moving parts, no heat, no big currents, etc.

          • Valmond@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            Yeah definitely isolate hot things well, it also uses less energy and heats up the surroundings less.

            For the washers, maybe but its just like 2 pumps a motor and a control board, it should be simple mechanics to switch those out if they break, IMO.

          • BubbleMonkey@slrpnk.net
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            10 days ago

            My burner igniters aren’t electronic-control and they still failed in a less than decade old stove that was not heavily used at all (I live alone and use the stove, not even the specific burners that failed, maaaaaaaaybe monthly)

            They just make their parts cheap overall. Induction isn’t enshittification-proof. If anything it’s more susceptible, being entirely electronic.

            That said I’d trade my gas stove for induction if I could, even with enshittification.

      • stretch2m@infosec.pub
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        10 days ago

        I bought a Bosch dishwasher because of this reputation, and I hate it.

        The drying function is a joke. Everything plastic comes out with water still all over it. My Maytag (which admittedly died) used to dry everything perfectly.

        Also the racks on the Bosch are poorly organized. It’s always a challenge to find places to fit everything.

        • Not a newt@piefed.ca
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          10 days ago

          Not to mention that newer low end Bosch dishwashers require an account and app for some functionality.

          • AtariDump@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            High end ones do too if you want to access all of the wash features; they can’t be entirely programmed from the device itself.

      • Lemmyoutofhere@lemmy.ca
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        10 days ago

        Miele is the GOAT. Love our Miele appliances. All of them are now 15 years old and not a single problem. Buying the 10 year warranty was a waste. Buy once, cry once. Only appliances I would consider are Miele and Bosch Benchmark.

        • BakedCatboy@lemmy.ml
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          11 days ago

          Also second hand lab equipment. I was tired of my kitchen scale breaking and having annoying features like auto off after like 60 seconds. Got an ohaus lab scale off eBay for like $50, handles 18lbs, has a configuration menu with tons of options and features like count mode, sequential weight summing, and lets you set auto off for up to 30 minutes or completely disable auto off. Takes regular AAs or plugs into an outlet. I love it and it’s built like a tank.

          • dmention7@midwest.social
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            11 days ago

            Man, having worked in a couple research labs in a previous life, there’s no way I’d use a used lab scale for food. Especially when $50 will actually get you a pretty decent scale that has not been potentially used for weighing everything from diseased mice to stool samples to unidentified precipitates from a failed chemical reaction.

            Since you’re here to type this, it was probably not used for anything too nasty, but I do not endorse that as a way to save a few bucks!

            • BakedCatboy@lemmy.ml
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              11 days ago

              Idk worrying about a lab leak type pathogen scenario through an ebay sale seems far fetched to me. I picked one that looked lightly used and clean and wiped it down with disinfectant when I got it. The chance of a pathogen surviving that long doesn’t sound like a realistic concern. Most things it plausibly would have been exposed to, save for like highly radioactive dust getting lodged in its crevices, is easily handled with basic sanitation and hand washing. And it’s not like I’m putting food on the surface anyways.

              • Markus29@feddit.nl
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                10 days ago

                Only thing I would be scared of is ethidium bromide on your food, but that probably wouldn’t be measured on a kg scale.

            • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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              11 days ago

              Yeah I think if I was gonna start using used lab equipment, a new autoclave would be my first purchase.

        • fubbernuckin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 days ago

          In general anything made for businesses. They might be fine with us having stuff that doesn’t work, but businesses still need things that work to produce things that don’t.

        • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          $1700 for a seven-year warranty. How much you want to bet it’s specifically engineered to last no more than eight years?

          The water heater that came with my house I bought in '98 lasted 20 years. I replaced it with the best I could afford at the time, which had a seven-year warranty. It lasted just over seven years. I replaced that one a couple of months ago with the longest warranty one I could find, which is twelve years. I know I’ll be replacing it in twelve years.

        • Polkira@piefed.ca
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          11 days ago

          Anything that’s sold in Canada? I’m in the market for a new washer after my last two died on the 2 year mark.

          • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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            11 days ago

            No warranty? If you bought with a credit card they usually have a warranty extension feature and will extend the manufacturer’s warranty for you.

            • Polkira@piefed.ca
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              11 days ago

              The first one was 2 weeks outside of warranty, the second one we’re currently waiting on the manufacturer and their mechanic. It’s a whole thing but it’s looking like it might be a refund at this point since it’s taking so long for them to even come look at it.

              The first one wasn’t repaired because the part was back-ordered and by the time we repaired it it wouldve ended up costing the same as a new one.

        • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 days ago

          My cousin had a coin operated speed queen washer when I briefly lived with her. The laundromat was getting rid of it not due to functioning, but because it would cost too much to retrofit it to use credit or bills, when it was already quite old.

          You could use coins to make it work, but the panel was missing and you’d just stick your hand in and flip the switch. Always felt like you’d electrocute yourself.

          Sucker ran great and she was doing 2 loads a day minimum (clearly no understanding of birth control, but she got her tubes tied after the 6th kid came out, so…)

          She got it for far less than the price of a new bare-bones machine, so that could be a great option for anyone who may want one!

    • 9point6@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Yeah I was gonna say you can do this today by looking for the company that only makes whatever it is you’re trying to buy and costs double what you expect to spend on it based on the competition.

      If you want something that lasts, you generally need to pay for it.

      (Though if you get the opportunity, ask someone who repairs the thing you’re trying to buy what the best brand is, they’re the people that know)

      • AsoFiafia@lemmy.zip
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        11 days ago

        Adding to this: just call around to different repair shops for the product you’re shopping for and ask them. Not only might you get some great advice, but you’ll also get an idea of who to call when you do need their services. How they respond when they know you’re not spending any money is a pretty good indicator of their true customer service.

      • village604@adultswim.fan
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        10 days ago

        Yup, the whole, “They don’t make things the way they used to,” thing is part survivorship bias, and part people not understanding that appliances used to be very major purchases.

        If you spent the equivalent of what they cost back then, you’ll get an appliance that lasts decades.

    • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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      10 days ago

      For groceries, Hofer (Aldi Süd) kinda does that where i live. They sell very basic, barely-processed food from no-name brands. Stuff typically costs about half (or at least it feels like it to me) of what you’d spend in other supermarkets, where they sell highly-processed foods (think fast food and such).

  • infinitesunrise@slrpnk.net
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    11 days ago

    There is a nonprofit org called Open Source Ecology that is aiming to create what they call the “Global Village Construction Set”, a collection of basic industrial machines required for modern living, designed in a way where everything can be built DIY by a single community (Including modular generators). I imagine that they have a plans for home appliances, I think as of now they’re still working on construction equipment.

    • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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      11 days ago

      That’s so cool. Yeah I’ve been thinking a great design strategy would be to build exclusively out of commonly accessible parts. Like, even repurpouse car parts if they’re more accessible, or use arduinos as the microcontrollers.

      • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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        9 days ago

        The thing about, say, a washing machine is there’s not a ton else that has a hefty spider/shaft/tub combo like that. The forces involved in spinning a few kilos of clothes isn’t trivial. I’ve been harbouring thoughts of open source appliances for a while.

        What I kind of feel might be viable are modular, generic controller boards for dryers/washing machines/dish washers.

      • infinitesunrise@slrpnk.net
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        10 days ago

        It does seem to have fizzled out a bit, sadly. They need to collaborate with other established groups doing similar things, IMO.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      10 days ago

      I think this is the way you have to do it. Open hardware designs. If you make a product that’s so reliable that it never breaks, it’s a product where you never get repeat business. If it’s a super simple thing that doesn’t need or get new features, you can never sell someone an upgrade. That’s great for the consumer, but not great for the appliance maker. So, there’s always an incentive for them to enshittify.

        • CookieOfFortune@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          Because consumers have shown to prefer features over reliability:

          French Door refrigerators are the most popular and most complex design.

          Built in ice makers are popular but also complex and prone to failure due to physics.

          They still sell very basic refrigerators and washer/dryers. But these don’t sell as well as more feature rich models.

          • JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            In my albeit anecdotal experience, these ‘very basic’ appliances suffer their own variant of faults. They take no modern design cues; they are more prone to reliability issues from bargain bin components; or they somehow cost only slightly less than their fancy feature rich counterparts.

            Just because I don’t want off-white equipment in my kitchen, I shouldn’t have to buy an ‘AI’ oven. But the companies want to know when and what I’m cooking so when I go to the grocery in the middle of dinner prep, the AI price labels can adjust a bit higher because they know I need an ingredient right now for a meal I’ve already started making.

            The variant of fault these normal appliances have aren’t truly a fault. It’s intentionally made to be less appealing, less reliable, and more expensive than it should be, so when we’re looking at a white oven in the store for $800, we’ll opt instead for the $1,000 Alexa powered stainless steel double range that’s sitting right next to it.

            Oh and if you’re in a spot and need to finance your new appliance, sorry but our financing isn’t available for the budget tier.

            This comment kind of went off the rails, didn’t it.

          • Bubbaonthebeach@lemmy.ca
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            10 days ago

            My recent experience buying such is that it is very very hard to find basic but quality models. If you’ve had a water dispenser or ice maker once, you realize how awful they are. They take up massive amounts of fridge and freezer space and need expensive filters every 3 months and break as soon as the short warranty is over. But if you want double door and bottom freezer you pretty much have to buy the crap extras as well.

          • Michael@slrpnk.net
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            10 days ago

            People would likely want products with new features and reliability.

            But what we actually have on the market is products with new features that are mostly unreliable, and slightly cheaper products with less features that are similarly or more unreliable. Our products are clearly regressing in quality even if the existence of luxury features or designs are rising.

            We are in a hostile relationship economically where almost every manufacturer is engaging in planned obsolescence (instead of using resources appropriately and making the products we want which also last).

            Corporations want us to keep buying - they are hyper-focused on perpetuating that reality.

          • Glaedr304@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            I don’t think complex design is the opposite of “just” it’s more that the refrigerator is just a kitchen refrigerator that doesn’t have weird proprietary temperature management system, and easily accessible replacement parts. It’s not also a built in tablet for example

          • RampantParanoia2365@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            But are there simple fridges that don’t look like rental apt fridges? If there was a nice simple fridge with a big bottom freezer, in stainless, I bet it’d sell. Tho water dispensers and ice makers are damn convenient when they do work.

            • Tja@programming.dev
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              10 days ago

              “all the companies are dumb and refuse to earn money this simple way that I discovered in a showerthought”

              Half of people on lemmy, facebook, reddit, twitter…

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          10 days ago

          I’m just going to run my car until it no longer functions because I can’t be doing with all of these crappy infotainment systems. My car has a non-functional radio and that’s it, it’s so old it has headlights that don’t even blind people, and buttons to control the AC.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      10 days ago

      There’s a huge one-time demand from consumers. But, if it’s an amazing device that never needs repairs (or that can easily be repaired by the consumer) and it has no bells and whistles, that’s a problem: there’s no repeat business.

        • merc@sh.itjust.works
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          10 days ago

          The people running the business, presumably. Generally people don’t want to go out of business because they can’t find any customers.

          • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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            9 days ago

            Once you’ve supplied everyone with it, figure out how to keep a buffer stock and move onto the next product. By the time you’ve sold every viable customer a washing machine, vacuum cleaner, fridge, freezer, mixer, cooker, dryer (whatever) they’d be fine, new stock still needs to be sold eventually so keep a trickle coming. Replacement parts etc.

            Biggest issue is it’s going to be expensive - will people pay?

                • merc@sh.itjust.works
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                  9 days ago

                  Not true at all. Businesses didn’t move onto the next product, they specialized, making the exact same thing year after year. Because manufacturing tolerances weren’t great, things would need repairs and replacement, so there was repeat business. Nobody kept a buffer stock and moved onto the next product.

      • Leon@pawb.social
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        10 days ago

        My washing machine and dryer likes to throw about AI. The model came out around or just before the current LLM craze started, and I’m guessing they wanted to capitalise on the buzzword.

        AI in the case of my washing machine means that it keeps track of the time and day of week, and what washing programmes I tend to run within a certain timeframe. It then suggests that programme when you turn it on. For the dryer, AI means “suggest the programme matching what the washer just washed.”

        Lately the washer has taken to flash “AI Cycle Complete” on its stupid little screen whenever it completes a wash, even if I keyed in every single setting myself. Such AI.

        • merc@sh.itjust.works
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          9 days ago

          Lately the washer has taken to flash “AI Cycle Complete”

          Lately? Does that mean your washer is getting some kind of regular firmware updates? Why? In case “laundry” changes?

      • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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        10 days ago

        Nothing has Ai. Everything that does refuses to explain what their use of that term means. It’s like buying the name brand cereal over the generic because someone slapped an “asbestos free” sticker on it.

    • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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      11 days ago

      Although intense marketing is a sign of enshittification 🤔 Perhaps looking at the ownership structures would almost be a better startegy. AFAIK enshittification predominantely affects publicly traded corpos.

  • fbn@slrpnk.net
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    11 days ago

    these exist, see speed queen

    the cost is going to be higher, though, because “smart” widgets can offset their initial costs through the projeted sale of the data harvested over the life of the widget

    most people being ignorant to this and to the inevitable issues with corporate-built “smart” widget infrastructure, the cheapest option will generally be the most popular

    my inner doctorow says that the twiddlers did this on purpose to undermine competition, especially considering the attempts to keep those widgets from being liberated

    • tabarnaski@sh.itjust.works
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      11 days ago

      The same thing is happening with cars. Good luck trying to get a new unconnected vehicle, and good luck to the company who plans to sell them.

    • BremboTheFourth@piefed.ca
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      11 days ago

      I think the price difference has more to do with scale than it does data. The main reason good, simple products can’t be cheaper is because the small companies who make them can’t put in the same gigantic bulk orders of raw materials, nor do they have the specialized manufacturing processes or assembly lines.

      The data is damn near an afterthought. Putting a touchscreen on a fridge is a great way to pretend a piece of shit is a premium product. If they can scrape your data too, then for sure they’ll go for it, but the main reason the screen is on there is because most people are still buying that shit.

  • null@piefed.nullspace.lol
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    11 days ago

    This kind of anti-enshittification marketing is starting to gain traction I think.

    A big part of Valve’s launch was saying stuff like “of course you can run whatever you want on it, it’s yours!”

  • Psythik@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    The Sims did it first, except the brand was called “Justa”. Justa dishwasher. Justa fridge.

  • fartographer@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I want to produce boxed recipes under a product line named “Jamaican”

    • Jamaican a pie
    • Jamaican mac and cheese
    • Jamaican chicken with mushroom gravy

    I also wanna make a perfume line named “Eureka,” following the same general idea but with awfully generic scent names

    • Eureka flowers
    • Eureka citrus
    • Eureka chicken with mushroom gravy
  • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    A total absense of tech would be bad for a washing machine. With a really simple conductivity sensor (basically just two electrodes on the sides of a plastic pipe) and an opacity sensor (an IR LED and an LDR on opposite sides of a clear pipe), you can measure how much stuff is dissolved in water and how much insoluable stuff is suspended. That then means that you can keep circulating the soapy water until it stops getting dirtier, then keep rinsing it out until it stops getting cleaner, which then means you can have the cycle times adjust themselves to how soiled the load is, instead of just making them as long as the worst case scenario might require and wasting energy, water, and time on an average load.

    • PNW clouds@infosec.pub
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      11 days ago

      My husband loves building elecronics. And there’s a lot of cool low-tech tech. I feel like basic circuit board stuff should be allowed, as it can be easy to repair if you know how. Just have the schematics available.

      The problem for me is when it needs an Internet connection for remote access on top of a lot of flimsy parts that wear out too quickly.

      • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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        10 days ago

        as it can be easy to repair if you know how

        i think this is a typical “just install linux” situation. While to you it might seem simple, you’re vastly overestimating most people’s affinity to tech.

        It really reminds me of this meme:

        • ilovepiracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 days ago

          Right to repair isn’t about everyone knowing how to do it, but providing the accessibility and potential for repairs, compared to purposely obfuscated tech which is at the mercy of corporate overlords. Yes, a lot of people won’t know how to repair it, but if they want to repair it without paying a professional, they still have the ability to research and learn how to do it themselves.

        • PNW clouds@infosec.pub
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          9 days ago

          No, I get it. But everything is hard to fix until you know how to do it.

          To me, This is about owning things you or someone else can repair with readily available parts. The problem now is remote bricking of purchases by the manufacturer through the internet. And things so cheaply made, the parts either don’t exist or the too much of it broke. Or having to pay subscriptions for the privilege to use the things you bought.

          It’s just that if you have a electronics nerd friend or curiosity, there’s a lot of basic electronics that can be repaired with incredibly cheap parts.

          For example, if your microwave completely dies, it’s probably a common $0.10 fuse. It’s not on the circuit board but it’s technically part of the electronics. You have to be careful to not touch the capacitors. But watch a video and you’ve brought something dead back to life.

          If you don’t trust yourself, call that friend that loves that kind of stuff, share a pizza and avoid buying a new microwave that spies on you.

      • AsoFiafia@lemmy.zip
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        11 days ago

        My parents had a washer/dryer combo(LG I think?) that required internet to work at all. They just connected it when they first got it and didn’t realize connectivity was required until there was an internet outage. They promptly replaced it with separate Maytags that’s so far seem to be pretty hardy.

    • zeca@lemmy.ml
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      11 days ago

      I think ive never seen a washing machine that doesnt do a pre-determined amount of cycles. That exists? And I thought I had a rather sophisticated washing machine.

      • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        I think the way it normally would work would be to do the existing steps for a bit longer if necessary or stop them early if possible, but the washing machine I’ve got at the moment sometimes gets its timer all the way to one minute and then adds an extra ten and starts rinsing again. In theory, that should be less likely to happen if you’re separating the washing by soiling levels like the manual says, but some of my family don’t believe the manual.

        • zeca@lemmy.ml
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          10 days ago

          Ah ok. I havent really read much of mines manual. But i did notice that the timer is often wrong, it seems to go slower than actual time. Would make sense if it is measuring something in the water and just putting an estimated timeon the display. I thought it was just a bad clock…

  • Not a newt@piefed.ca
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    11 days ago

    There’s tradeoffs - simplicity, repairability, efficiency.

    Take washers, for example. I was looking at Speed Queen washers to replace mine. On paper they are great, more durable. But it turns out that while they have physical knobs and switches, newer models still hide a circuit board inside, so the gap between commercial and consumer models is shrinking (and not in the direction we want.)

    The Speed Queen washers also have nearly half the capacity of off the shelf consumer washers, and use twice the amount of water and electricity. I did the math, and at the current utility and washer prices I’d break even replacing the washer every 5 years.

    Furthermore, the local appliance repair shop that I trust told me it could take them weeks to get replacement parts for Speed Queen. For a laundromat that’s not a huge deal when it’s one washer out of twenty, for a single machine home it’s a problem.

    Yes, I do wish that consumer appliances were more reliable. But barring that, the next best thing is easily and quickly repairable, and on that matter there’s brands that are qualitatively and quantitatively better in that regard than others.

    • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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      10 days ago

      I also want to point out that for some products (such as smart phones) there’s an additional trade-off between repairability and quality:

      When you have screws in your phone instead of having everything glued together, that means you have additional moving parts and probably gaps between the parts, where water can enter and cause corrosion. If everything is glued together, it’s not repairable but it’s also less likely that it needs to be repaired because there’s fewer problems to begin with.

  • cecilkorik@piefed.ca
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    11 days ago

    I just want everything with a heating element to use a heat pump instead. Electric heating elements are so horribly inefficient and wasteful in comparison.

    I have a ventless heat pump combo washer/dryer. It takes up half the space that two machines would, plugs into a regular 110V outlet, gets HOT (way hotter than I expected a heat pump has any right to achieve), drains all its drying water into the drain, vents none of my indoor air outside, doesn’t require changing laundry from one machine to the other. Practically and mechanically it seems brilliant and I can’t imagine why I would ever buy a traditional machine ever again. Except…

    It’s chock full of horrible apps and shit that I’ll never use. It’s way too “smart”, and those “smarts” are not there for my benefit. After a month or two it finally gave up trying to pester me to connect it to a network and install the app, which I’ll never, ever do. It’s never going to see an update or new firmware if I can help it, but I’m afraid that if/when it ever breaks, I’ll have no choice. I know it’s going to do things like eventually refuse to work until the computer has been “updated” to be “compatible” with new parts. And it’s not even just that it’s going to be expensive. It’s that I don’t trust it, and I don’t trust it to remain functional in the future, even if there are parts, that they won’t let me install the parts, or will require me to agree to play by their “rules” before I can.

    Right to repair needs to be a thing, and people need to be able to break the ridiculous amount of both legal and practical control these manufacturers have over their devices after they’ve left the factory. We cannot and should not trust the manufacturers to support it. We need to allow independent repair.

    • favoredponcho@lemmy.zip
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      10 days ago

      Heat pumps require a line to the outdoors, which may not be possible to create for existing use cases.

      Also, if I recall, hot water heaters that use heat pumps can’t actually get hot enough to completely heat the water and rely on electricity a bit. Therefore, I’m not sure everything with a heating element (ie. stovetop, oven, espresso machine, etc.) would work for that.

      Edit: for those downvoting, please link me where I can buy a heat pump oven and stovetop. Would really like to install one.

      • cecilkorik@piefed.ca
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        10 days ago

        Incorrect, no connection to outdoors is required for these appliances. In the case of the ventless combo, it literally hooks up to nothing other than the standard washing machine hookup. 1 normal 15 amp power outlet, 1 hot water hose, 1 cold water hose, 1 drain hose. No dryer vents, no other tubes or hoses, no drilling or cutting, no changes at all required. It is literally a drop-in replacement for any washer, but it also dries, with a heat pump, powered from the same circuit the washer uses and the same drain the washer uses.

        Also, let me blow your mind a little bit: theoretically, the cold water main running to your house contains enough heat energy to completely heat your house all winter on its own. It is cold to us, but thermodynamically it’s a goldmine and you have an extremely generous supply of it. Water represents an enormous reservoir of heat, and you can play some really fun games with latent heat of evaporation and condensation (which is exactly how heat pumps work in the first place). Dehumidifiers add as much or more heat to a room than a space heater does, using a fraction of the electrical power. That’s the power of the heat contained in water. I’m not saying that a heat pump dryer is doing this with your water supply, simply pointing out that once water is in play, it becomes way more of a complex issue than performance figures on paper actually represent.

        Obviously, clean drinkable water is also a scarce resource, so using it directly for any form of heating would be wasteful in its own way, but the point is that it would be technically possible. Including water in the discussion adds a lot of really interesting possibilities to the way we manage heat and energy, and we will eventually need to start understanding how much heat we literally throw away down the drain and how wasteful that actually is. And in the process we’ll learn to save some money and maybe even make our lives a bit more convenient.

      • Ageroth@reddthat.com
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        10 days ago

        Heat pumps absolutely do not need to connect indoors and outdoors, every fridge and freezer is just a heat pump connected to a box.

        Ive had a ventless heat pump clothes dryer, about 5 years ago, maybe 6. Technically it made the room it was in slightly colder while it ran, but that heat from my house was just concentrated inside the box and then allowed to escape back into my house.

        I also think there have been advances in heat pump technology either with the refrigerant used to transfer the heat or with cascading systems that run multiple loops with different heat capacity so that one loop takes room temp water to “warm” temps and a secondary loop takes the “warm” water to hot.

      • Kindness is Punk@lemmy.ca
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        10 days ago

        I think they mean appliances that don’t necessarily heat an area but heat is a function of their purpose.

        In the example given, a combo washer dryer, it is not necessary to have a link to the outside it merely uses the ambient air as it’s source of heat, The same is also common among heat pump water heaters.

      • Tkpro@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Yea but heat pumps have a coefficient of performance of greater than 1 cause you’re moving heat instead of generating it.

      • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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        10 days ago

        Yeah my heat pump is something like 2000% efficient. It can cheat because it doesn’t convert electricity into heat, it uses electricity to move heat from the outside to the inside (or vice versa).

      • PieMePlenty@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        So, 1 kwh electric energy to an electric heater produces 1 kwh of heating energy.
        So to give you an idea how a heatpump would do: looking at my heat pump’s data registers right now, it says it used 3.6 kwh electric energy in the last hour to produce 12.7 kwh heating energy (air to water).

      • cecilkorik@piefed.ca
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        10 days ago

        GE Profile PFQ97HSPVDS. Not a sponsor, and not even a recommendation. It feels icky even admitting it. The only reason I am mentioning it at all is because I did manage to get it to (eventually) stop aggravating me about installing the app and connecting it to wifi and now it just works without annoyance as it should have from day one, and I recognize the possibility of having access to that feature alone may be valuable to someone. I can’t guarantee the one you buy now will even act the same way, as these things can be and are updated without notice.

        I found some third-party home assistant stuff for GE smart home products on github if that’s important to you, but I haven’t even tested it for this as it still involves the appliance phoning home and everything is still gatekept through GE’s website and like I said I refuse to ever let this thing touch any form of internet connection or wireless.

        • Wahots@pawb.social
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          10 days ago

          Got it! I saw a Samsung one the other week, so that’s why I was curious. I still want a heatpump dryer, just a better one that doesn’t beg for clicks.

      • kossa@feddit.org
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        10 days ago

        For maintainability heat pump dryers are shit though. You can’t take the heat pump condenser out and thus you cannot properly clean it 😐. If you get lint stuck in there it starts reeking. The old condensers you could just take out and rinse.

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    And easier to repair, too.

    A GE washing or drying machine from 30 years ago has easily removable panels, about 4 to 6 screws each and large easily identifiable parts, but one from a couple of years ago requires the top to be propped up or secured and the panels removed in a specific order such that you can them remove the internal plastic panels through which wires need to be dismounted around the drum with like 8 or more screws each of varying sizes and when it comes time to put it back together I hope you’ve got more than three arms because fuck you thats why.