• Freefall@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Gerber Legend 800 Multitool

    The one I got from a PX the year after it was released is epic. Have carried it for 23 years. It has seen everything and outside of scraping the knife sharpish again, has never been maintained. I misplaced it for a bit (under friends driver’s seat for about a year) and couldn’t find a replacement “upgrade”. Did the Leatherman wave2 for a bit. Couldn’t take it, hit up eBay, got 3 more Gerber L800s (later release, still in boxes)…so bad. They just felt cheaper. When we stumbled upon my old Gerber, I kept the new ones for parts. Replace my knife with a new one…it already has rust dots on it. My old one after decades of abuse and being sharpened to half it’s starting width, doesn’t have a spot of rust on it.

    ANYWAY…yeah…what OP said.

  • JamesTBagg@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    If you really are looking for a hoodie: 1620.
    Prices are high, they’re very proud of their products. Their work pants aren’t worth it, garage. Both pairs I bought don’t come close to my Wrangler for durability.
    However, their hoodie is pretty dope. It’s long, and the hood is huge. A proper functioning hood. It’s thick & warm. Only downside is it’s long, and I’m 6’1", it falls below my ass. The waist is also wide, or my waist is just more narrow than the average tradesman they’re targeting.

  • w3dd1e@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    You buy it anyway, and it’s a great purchase. Very happy. Dog eats it a few days later and the product is discontinued. Or Is it just me?

  • Taleya@aussie.zone
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    2 months ago

    Everyone replies with ‘thanks’, ‘nailed it’. ‘Holy shit that’s perfect’

    To a comment that’s [deleted]

  • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    there needs to be a crowd sourced product review and maintenance website that can see trends of enshittification.

    • parody@lemmings.world
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      2 months ago

      Let’s say everyone used an identity verification service to signup, like had to send photos of their ID and their SSN (national identity number) to be vetted by a third party.

      How long after the service got popular would it take for the most aggressive marketers to pay rings of fraudsters to lend their identities and/or make fake reviews?

      I think it would definitely start out great until it got big enough to be super useful and then the fraud would ramp up. I think an organization like Consumer Reports has a chance at successfully maintaining a low-bias product database, but the paywall is a big obstacle, as is the fact they’ll only review the largest product catalogs.

      • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        These are the pitfalls with the “amazon reviews/yelp” model.

        A decent implementation of the Wikipedia/FOSS model sidesteps this because it theoretically is run by opinionated curators. No amount of bots/shills can break the article soft-lock ounce foul play is spotted.

        That’s not to say these systems haven’t been occasionally broken through more sophisticated attacks, but empirically it seems clear that the model generally works well enough given enough community engagement (which would be the biggest challenge IMO, because maintainers can’t be expected to buy every product, and reliable primary sources may be hard to come by).

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I think it would need to be a subscriber service paid for by consumers who are willing to pay for good reviews. Otherwise the consumers become the product and eventually marketers take over.

      Also crowd-sourced reviews are what we’re supposed to have already, both on Reddit and Amazon (and anywhere else).

      What I envision would be a publication that funds a set of reviewers (maybe a mix of full time and part time, since some products are appropriate for testing as a job while others are more appropriate to just use for a while).

      Each product would either be bought by the org directly, or if manufacturers provide review samples, a layer of indirection is used to avoid the reviewer feeling like they need to give a good review to keep the free shit coming (with clear communication to the supplier that free or not well have no effect on the review).

      Any issues get included in the review fairly, along with any kind of resolution (which should ideally go through both consumer channels as well as reviewer back channels, the former to show what average customers should expect, the latter to hopefully resolve design flaws).

      The reviewer will then keep the product and give updates, either in the form of “still using it and it is like x after y months/years”, “doesn’t get much use because I’m using this other thing instead because of x, y, z”, or “doesn’t get much use because I’m not really part of the target audience”.

      My complete vision includes brick and mortar locations where products are available to try out, and maybe sales handled there, where any product available has a “we vouch for the quality of this product” where flaws are highlighted as much as features are.

      Though I think the idea is self-defeating because if it gains momentum, it could halt or reverse enshitification and make it redundant, fail, then enshitification returns. Ideally, enshitification is stopped with legislation about quality and enforcement that questions why a bad design is used when a better one is obvious.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      The trick is designing the thing in such a way as to resist infiltration by astroturfing marketers.

  • qooqie@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Because Reddit is infested with bot accounts at this point I tend to trust older threads over newer ones. Easy as hell to buy accs to say a competitor sucks dick

  • Anti-Face Weapon@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    For something like a hoodie, I recommend you go to a thrift store. Anything you find there will be durable and quality enough to survive, and you can feel it or try it on. It’s very easy to find high quality stuff while thrifting. 8 dollars for what might cost 80 new.

    Try to focus on non-synthetic fibers or semi synthetic. Plastics in clothing are bad for the environment.

    • LucasWaffyWaf@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I snagged the world’s comfiest leather jacket for $8 at a local thrift shop. All it needed was some stitching in a couple pockets, but it’s bloody perfect otherwise. Eight friggen bucks.

    • Naz@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Plastic in clothes is bad for you, not just the environment

      Microplastics apparently do infiltrate through the skin

      We have… done bad things with our world.

  • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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    2 months ago

    This is where guitars are right now.

    Both Fender and Gibson are now owned by venture capitalists. Their quality of everything, from strings to picks to guitars, has plummeted across every brand in the last five years. It’s sad really.

    You do on Reddit and people talk about the models and which one is great for this, or why they prefer it for that, but then you find some deeper dives into more recent spaces and people who know what they are talking about have moved away entirely from both brands.

    • bstix@feddit.dk
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      2 months ago

      I saw a headline on some guitar magazine “These are the most over priced guitars currently”. Says a lot and it’s true.

      There’s not much point in throwing money at a brand name anymore. Quality control is long gone and they all come straight out of a factory anyway. It’s alright though, because factory quality is decent, and with a little know-how you can easily make them play good.

      My best guitar is a $100 kit-build. Acknowledging that I’d need to do a full setup on any guitar I figured I might as well paint and assemble it myself, because I’m not going to pay several hundreds just for a paint job and a logo.

      • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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        1 month ago

        Did you like building your own? I have a used PRS SE 24, which I got for a steal due to paint scuffs, but thought about building my own.

        • bstix@feddit.dk
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          1 month ago

          Yes absolutely, I enjoyed it and might do it again sometime with a different kit.

          I do have a lot of tools already so that wasn’t costly, only good practice, but it did take somewhat longer than I expected.

          I wouldn’t attempt to make the neck and fretboard from scratch, so a kit with a good neck is a good starting point.

          • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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            1 month ago

            Did you find any useful guides online or on YouTube for getting started? I have a decent set of tools, but this would be a new endeavor for me.

            Well aware this would be a “me” guitar and not something that would have much of a value to anyone else. Some people seem to think they are building their own K-Line guitar.

            • bstix@feddit.dk
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              1 month ago

              It was all pretty straight forward. The kit was made to be assembled with a bolt on neck all predrilled, so it was basically just shaping the body and headstock and then paint and varnish.

              I did look up some painting techniques, but I really just wanted to stain the wood, so I did that with a brush and then 2 coats of varnish. I had to sand the wood first to make it more open for staining instead of paint. If you want to paint or spray paint you should probably keep or make a base coat to avoid the wood absorbing the paint.

              It was a cheap stratocaster-like kit, so I wasn’t too concerned with making mistakes, but I’ll admit that putting the saw into a guitar was a little daunting at first.

              I used a multi-cutter for most of it to make very precise cuts. And lots and lots of sandpaper by hand with different grit sizes.

              It only took a few evenings to do, so it is not difficult at all, but I guess it depends on how much you want to customize it.

              • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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                1 month ago

                Do you know the brand? Sounds like my next winter project.

                I want to make one with normal pickups - Out1 and add a piezo bridge with a three way switch for an Out2. Some of the sounds people are getting by blending the two are incredible.

    • MouseKeyboard@ttrpg.network
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      2 months ago

      The classic “Buy a reputable brand, cut costs and coast along on the reputation until you can sell off all your shares and move on to another company”. Bonus points for using legalised embezzlement share buyback.

  • voluble@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    This is the sort of thing that the old internet could really deliver on. Chances are, a search query could lead you to some guy’s hoodie blog, and he just liked hoodies, and posted honestly about them.

    Now, it’s all a mess of SEO pumped affiliate link lists filled with crapware. If the query is even thinkable, there will be AI generated pages stuffed with sponsored links, ready and waiting for you. And with search engines preferring recent results, that’s the type of page you’ll be served.

    I’ve had decent luck using marginalia search to seek out some of those old internet type results. Obscurity works as a barrier to corporate infiltration. Plus you get page results that don’t have a million tracking and analytics scripts running on them, which is refreshing.

  • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Whether they’re trustworthy or not I’m not sure, but they’ve not failed me yet

    I tend to go for those “2024 top 10 x” lists, jabra 65t was a very good recommendation from there, my toaster, probably a bunch of other things I’ve now forgotten about

    • zod000@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      They generally aren’t trustworthy overall, but many of those lists that have decent suggestions are just stolen content from more legit sources that don’t SEO farm and get buried in search engine results.

    • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      Very happy with my jabra headphones as well. May not be best price for performance but they are solid enough. (85h elite and 65t active)

  • sakodak@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    When you Google for “best whatever” and land on a reddit thread, take some time to look at the histories of the people commenting.

    You’ll find many cases where the only post they’ve ever made was for that product, and cases where the person posting the question also posts in the comments with an answer, like they forgot to switch to alt accounts.

    A lot of it is obvious SEO marketing nonsense. Trust nothing. The entire Internet is trying to scam you. Enshittification, indeed. This used to be a nice neighborhood before the capitalists moved in in the 90s.

  • NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone
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    2 months ago

    Just get a cheap one in KMart. It’ll likely fall apart, but it still comes from the same sweatshop as your favourite brand and you didn’t pay so much for the months of wear you got.

  • Gumby@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I ran into this when I was thinking about buying some Doc Martens recently. I know there have been other examples, that’s just the most recent I can remember.