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31 votes
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The real trap of consumerism
13 votes -
General product recommendations
I'm a pretty conscientious person and I like to research stuff before I buy it - I'm not obsessive about getting The Best Whatever In Class, but like anyone I'm interested in a good deal for a...
I'm a pretty conscientious person and I like to research stuff before I buy it - I'm not obsessive about getting The Best Whatever In Class, but like anyone I'm interested in a good deal for a product that suits my needs.
Between the prevalence of review-stuffing bots, Google's results getting worse, and reviewers themselves sometimes having questionable financial backing, I'm finding it harder and harder to find reliable information. So the gold standard is personal recommendations from real people!
I checked and it's been a while since we've had a general recommendations thread on Tildes so I thought it might be nice to start up another one with the influx of new folks!
Possible points of discussion:
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Are you looking to buy something and hoping to hear from people about what's good and what's bad? Post the type of thing you're looking for in a top-level comment and others can chime in!
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Is there a product you enjoy or that has improved your life, fills a niche or special requirement really well, or stands out to you as being a big improvement over its competitors? Is there a particular company you had a great experience with? Share with others who might also benefit!
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Is there a product you tried, HATED, and want to warn people about? Something that's all hype, no substance? I think that also fits here.
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Are there any reviewers or sites you trust in particular?
85 votes -
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Meet the people working three jobs to afford Erewhon
11 votes -
Why are we often hesitant to spend money on digital services?
This is sort of a "does anyone else?" type question, but I think it can create some interesting discussion. We have become accustomed to having many things for free online. Search, social media,...
This is sort of a "does anyone else?" type question, but I think it can create some interesting discussion.
We have become accustomed to having many things for free online. Search, social media, news, videos, games etc. The price of course is ads and our personal data. But spending money on these kinds of services that exists for free sometimes feels like a hurdle to overcome. I recently gave the paid search engine Kagi a try, and I spent way too much time pondering whether it was worth the $5. Yet I can spend ten times as much on random physical purchases or a round drinks with only a few seconds of decision making.
Even though we have lived with digital products for decades now, having something tangible and physical between your fingers still feels better. With some exceptions, because most people are paying for streaming services but renting movies in the video store have always cost money, so we are used to that - unlike stuff like search and email which many of us have gotten used to being available for free.
Can this ever change outside very tech-minded people? Because services that rely on subscriptions rather than dataharvesting and ads do exist, but with the exceptions of maybe the big streaming services, few get wider appeal and the masses flock to the so-called free services instead. I find it almost depressing that we have all these brilliant and innovative tech companies around the world doing amazing things, but a good deal of it all ends up with the goal of showing more ads. It is hard to compete with free, but is it possible to challenge the current most successful business model of "paying" with ads and data?
36 votes -
Citizen future: Why we need a new story of self and society
4 votes -
Stop shopping - America needs you to buy less junk
16 votes -
Coca Cola and soda consumption growth in India
9 votes -
How and why I stopped buying new laptops
20 votes -
On the infestation of small-souled bugmen
12 votes -
Shopping addiction and COVID: The Amazon addicts of quarantine
11 votes -
The last time you'll buy shoes (Thought experiment: You'll get to a point in life where mundane objects might last longer than you do)
13 votes -
The board game that turns feminism into a joke: I played Ms. Monopoly so that you don’t have to
12 votes -
The woman who founded Mother's Day in the US eventually came to regret it
12 votes -
The more Patagonia rejects consumerism, the more the brand sells
9 votes -
Will the millennial aesthetic ever end?
12 votes -
How Mrs. Meyer’s took over the hand soap aisle
7 votes -
Truth be sold: How truth became a product
12 votes -
When we give in to manufactured internet wars
7 votes -
It's time to boycott any company doing business in Xinjiang
17 votes -
How I miss Halloween and why I'm not handing out candy
Halloween has always been one of my favourite events of the year. I loved dressing up (though we always had to wear a winter coat over our costumes), I loved going trick-or-treating with my...
Halloween has always been one of my favourite events of the year. I loved dressing up (though we always had to wear a winter coat over our costumes), I loved going trick-or-treating with my friends, and I loved sorting through our pillowcase of loot at the end of the night. I remember entire streets decorated as graveyards and how lively it was with kids everywhere. A few houses down from us, a neighbour set up a haunted house in their garage every year, and it ended with a warm hot chocolate with little marshmallows. We always planned to hit that house when we started getting cold.
When my partner and I starting handing out candy, we were in a relatively newly developed neighbourhood, and had very few kids. We handed out full sized chocolate bars and chips, the best prizes when we were trick-or-treating! We took turns answering the door and just loved to see the costumes. We counted Darth Vaders and witches and whatever was popular that year. It was always a lot of fun.
We stopped handing out candy about two years ago, mostly because I didn't want to get Nestle candy, which was the nut-free stuff that we usually got, and because it felt wasteful. There are a lot of drives right after Halloween where people basically dumped pounds of chocolate (either trading them to their dentist, or using them to make Halloween art). At work, every parent would bring in bags of candy to share. It was honestly just too much, especially considering the individually wrapped plastic. I've also started noticing that everyone is starting to sell plastic "Halloween candy reusable" bags, and I just really dislike that.
We're always looking for an alternative because I still really want to take part in Halloween again. This year, we again decided against handing out candy, and I'm already missing seeing the little trick-or-treators and their costumes, and their joy in getting a little treat.
26 votes -
Romantic regimes
6 votes -
The pros, cons, and possibilities of virtual idols
3 votes -
How the ‘IKEA effect’ subtly influences how you spend
6 votes -
In the flesh: Online brands promise an escape from the conventional logic of consumerism — until they open physical stores
8 votes -
The tyranny of convenience
12 votes -
What products do you absolutely love?
Are there any cool new products you find yourself constantly recommending to your friends?
58 votes -
Stop buying crap, and companies will stop making crap
30 votes -
why i only own 4 books 💸 a chat on booktube consumerism
12 votes -
The big squeeze: Sicily’s mafia sprang from the growing global market for lemons – a tale with sour parallels for consumers today
8 votes -
Mass authentic
5 votes -
British public bought £14bn of goods made by slaves in 2017, claims report
8 votes -
How is Prime Day going for everyone?
Anyone find any good deals on Buy-It-For-Life quality products? Let's talk about our hauls!
5 votes -
The gift of death
8 votes