• josefo@leminal.space
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    2 months ago

    Streaming like in twitch, podcasts, tiktok, and other “user generated content”. I’m not even 40 yet but I really feel like “old man yells at cloud”.

    Actually, the mere term “content” makes me cringe. You do art? Now it’s called content. You are an independent reporter? Now you do content. You like plants? How about turning that into content? Content: you are either consuming it or producing it. Fuck content as a concept. And fuck discoverability algorithms and every clown trying to game them. Fuck social media spoon-feeding brainrot to people. I feel anti-hyped for all that.

  • comfy@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Most celebrities. I know its usually manufactured hype, but I still don’t understand people falling for it.

    Collectible toys. On top of not getting it, I hate it from an environmental perspective and a wasted resources (incl labor) perspective.

  • JASN_DE@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    Most things. Hype is usually just marketing, at least nowadays. I’ve seen a lot of hypes come and go, and it’s always the same playbook.

    • Cherry@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      Agree. Made a real effort in recent years to question the crap what I really need, and what’s a want vrs a need.

      I feel a lot happier not buy stuff upon stuff. I’m trying to buy as much used/second hand as possible.

      I don’t understand many of the product hypes. Why would you pay more to endorse someone’s brand. The cups. Like $50 for a cup. That’s crazy, you still drink the same water out of it.

  • tomcatt360@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    Driving a pickup truck as your commute vehicle. The mileage is terrible, and you have reduced visibility in front of the hood. Get a safer and more efficient vehicle. It’ll be cheaper!

    • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      The way to restrict them to industrial purposes is to require a CDL or at least a higher level license to drive them. It would make sense too, they’re objectively more dangerous so why shouldn’t the licensing for them be more strict?

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        2 months ago

        I wouldn’t want one myself, but I don’t understand trying to ban something just because I don’t like it.

        • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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          2 months ago

          Not ban, but make the licensing process more rigorous for a vehicle that takes more skill to operate safely compared to a standard car. Anyone can get a higher class drivers license if they pass the test, but the majority of people won’t bother so you end up with less trucks driven by people who just want to look cool.

            • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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              2 months ago

              Because trucks have been proven to be more dangerous and make any accident more likely to be fatal? They also present unique safety challenges not present in smaller cars, namely they have a huge blind spot in front of them like any other tall commercial vehicle. If you’re going to drive a more dangerous vehicle, you’d better actually know how to drive it safely.

              • iii@mander.xyz
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                2 months ago

                There’s indeed many people that claim it’s very dangerous, and women should cover their hair in public!

                In both cases I’d rather see people happy and just enjoy their lives

                • Xavienth@lemmygrad.ml
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                  2 months ago

                  Hard to enjoy life spread across the pavement like a crayon by a truck.

                  Believe it or not, some lifestyle choices have consequences external to the person making the decision

    • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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      2 months ago

      I agree, 90%. That being said, some people can’t afford a car that isn’t provided by their construction employer. Some people have hobbies that involve moving things (motorcycles, mountain bikes, wood, etc) and can only afford one car. And I’m sure there are reasons I’m not thinking of.

      Most people with pickups around me do not need them, but having owned a small S10 years ago for a similar to above reason, I try to see why they exist, and try not to judge if it’s not obvious.

      All that being said, Why oh why are they so big now?

      • BussyCat@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Mountain bikes can easily be carried with a car, motorcycles are normally self propelled and don’t need to a pick up truck to move them and they make trailers for moving them that can be towed by a normal sedan, wood is another thing that’s not normally transported unless you are using the truck for work and can be easily transported by a trailer or a rental truck for infrequent use

        • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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          2 months ago

          A family of mountain bikes is not great on the back/top of a car. Not all motorcycles are for the road. And wood is very normally transported if that is your hobby.

  • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Labubus.

    Kids wanting them I get, but the craze among adults for them is baffling to me. And the blind bag mechanic is just a bullshit way to get people to buy more than they actually want in an attempt to collect a full set. It’s honestly kind of sad to see so many adults fall for something meant to manipulate children into begging their parents to buy over and over again.

    You know something is worth your money when they deliberately obfuscate what you’re actually buying.

  • sneekee_snek_17@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    The Chance-Vought F4U Corsair. People fangirl over the reverse gull-wings but I just don’t get it. Bending the goddamn wings to fit the the prop on the plan is just a bizarre bandaid for an odd design.

    Gimme that P-47 chunky monkey any day

  • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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    2 months ago

    Sex

    Turns out I’m asexual.

    The spicy part is try being asexual yet HOPELESSLY romantic

    But aside from THAT – Brand name clothing.

    Most of it doesn’t even look good

    There was a time the rich dressed decadently, that was conspicuous consumption, but at least it looked pretty and shiny in pictures. Nowadays rich people be buying clothes that look exactly, completely indistinguishable from the discount shop made-in-china artificial-fabric rags everyone else is wearing, but which have a logo printed on them. And that logo is what makes it expensive.

    • comfy@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      I’ve had people outright claim caffeine and coffee aren’t addicting. It basically ticks all the boxes, from habit-forming chemical dependency to social reinforcement. Out of addictions to have, it’s one of the less harmful ones, but it absolutely can form addiction and people who can’t function without it are dependent, even if they can overcome it easily.

    • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      It’s just the latest technological breakthrough that should for all intents and purposes been a niche and served just a few specific purposes really well, but because the people in charge of tech companies don’t actually understand technology and just jump at the most advanced looking thing they see, all the developers are forced to integrate AI into all their products.

      “Internet of things” was another one that really pissed me off because it ruined smart devices and home automation as concepts. Things like smart thermostats and light bulbs that should absolutely have used the local network to communicate ended up connected to the internet and using it as their only means of control, which is inferior to local network control in every possible way and is the reason why everyone hates home automation now, and what was once a very promising concept became the symbol of everything wrong with technology. But because IOT was a flashy term that could be jingled like keys in front of a CEO, every product needed to be internet enabled for the devs to not get fired.

    • A good water bottle is a friend for life. We have a dozen in the cupboard:

      • several are plastic, mostly swag but a couple that are for bikes. They’re cheap, and one leaks from the lid, but I’m not going to buy another little, metal water bottle just for the bike. Plastic is mostly useless as they don’t keep liquids cool.
      • there are a few workout ones that are just tall cups with lids. Again, plastic; their one use is working out, because they don’t break or break things if they get dropped on the treadmill. I hate the lid mechanism.
      • there are a few metal ones; again, mostly swag. Two are actual thermoses with great insulation, but they’re relatively small (16 oz), and their sippy lids are clearly optimized for hot liquids the other metal ones have screw tops and are a PITA to use. In fact, one is my second most recent one, which I replaced because unscrewing the top in the middle of the night was fussy so I’d just leave the top off, except I kept knocking it over by fumbling for it in the dark, spoiling water all over the nightstand and carpet.
      • we have two glass ones, and one with an electric mixer base that I got for my wife for when she travels, so she can more easily have protein shakes in the morning. The glass ones are insulated and nice, but the tops don’t seal and you don’t want you drop them, so they just live in the cupboard.

      And then there’s my prize, the black widow. Isn’t she lovely? Oh, wait, sorry, wrong song.

      The one I have now, that has taken me decades to refine, is 1 liter - not too large, so it’s easy to carry around, but enough so a couple of refills a day are enough. It has a little handle to facilitate carrying. It’s metal, and robust. It’s vacuum insulated, so it keeps ice water cold all night. And it has a little sippy spout with a sprung button orifice so that when I knock it over it doesn’t leak. It’s the perfect water bottle, and it took me a couple decades of trial and error to refine my requirements for a water bottle: the size, the mechanism, the material.

      A water bottle that meets all of your specific use case needs really is wonderful; it’s a pleasure to use, is convenient, and by its nature encourages you to hydrate. Honestly, it’s one is those weirdly and unexpectedly useful things that you’d never expect to have as big an impact as it does, that you find yourself using more than any other single gadget you own.