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Ask HN: What are the best-designed things you've ever used?

515 pointsby whitepoplarover 3 years ago
I&#x27;ll go first. I think the Bialetti Brikka is exceptional: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Bialetti-Stovetop-Producing-Crema-Rich-Espresso&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B08BR86LR3" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Bialetti-Stovetop-Producing-Crema-Ric...</a>

281 comments

toomanyrichiesover 3 years ago
One example of quality design which I gleaned from reading Don Norman&#x27;s &quot;The Design Of Everyday Things&quot; is the metal plate I&#x27;ve frequently seen on doors which are meant to be pushed.<p>The only affordance of such a plate is its push-ability, and the fact that someone actively installed a metal plate (instead of just relying on the door&#x27;s natural flatness), as well as its location at the point of maximum leverage (all the way to the right of the door, in the door&#x27;s vertical center), is a clear signifier for such push-ability.<p>Not only that, but it does its job without offering any other confusing affordances (such as a vertical handle which is also <i>technically</i> pushable, but which many would interpret as being meant to be pulled).<p>Whenever I need a relatable, succinct example of affordances and signifiers for my engineering comrades, I turn to this one. Anyone interested in design is doing themselves a dis-service by not reading Don Norman&#x27;s classic.
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guidovrankenover 3 years ago
BitTorrent is amazing. It just works. Anyone anywhere can create a torrent of their files, dump the magnet link somewhere, and everyone else can reliably retrieve it. It is self-reinforcing; the more people using a torrent, the better the robustness, redundancy and download speeds. You can often get better speeds from downloading something via torrent than from a web server. It&#x27;s an open protocol that is relatively easy to implement, it has a diversity of lightweight clients for all OSes and is fairly resistant to censorship. To me it&#x27;s pretty much perfect tech that solves a real problem. I hope Bram Cohen got rich off of it somehow.
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palijerover 3 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mcmaster.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mcmaster.com&#x2F;</a><p>Fast, snappy, responsive. No banners or cookie prompts, doesn&#x27;t ask my to sign up for a newsletter or an account to continue and see more selection, it doesn&#x27;t load in megabytes of JavaScript to show me products.<p>Plus, responsive as all heck, and there isn&#x27;t any bullshit prompts like &quot;click here to see our selected offerings&quot; or &quot;check out our value products here&quot; Like, from. The short url, I&#x27;m already looking at the products.
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theduemmerover 3 years ago
McMaster-Carr has the best shopping website I&#x27;ve ever seen. The UI is beautifully intuitive; even if I don&#x27;t know exactly what I need, odds are I can easily find something that will work and they can have it at my doorstep in under 24 hours, no matter how obscure. Even if I don&#x27;t plan on buying anything, it can be helpful to click through the site just to see what is available. Because most categories of parts have surprisingly well written descriptions and breakdowns, the sire can actually be a good engineering resource.<p>I&#x27;ve bought from them many times before and have yet to be disappointed with what I got. It is definitely expensive compared to other suppliers or Amazon, etc. But you pay for the convenience.<p>I hear they aren&#x27;t very good outside the US though, which is a shame.
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invalidatorover 3 years ago
GearWrench ratcheting wrenches. They&#x27;re compact and fit in places that sockets never will. The ratcheting mechanism is very fine, with low backlash, which matters a lot in those tight places. They feel great, and they&#x27;re a delight to use.<p>Wirewrap tools. They&#x27;re mechanically simple, easy to learn, and let you create neat, dense hobby prototypes faster and easier than soldering.<p>Wago Lever Nuts. These let you join a wide range of wires, from 24 to 12 AWG, stranded or solid. They&#x27;re quick: strip, insert and flip. They&#x27;re verifiable: you can check that it&#x27;s done right just by looking at it. They&#x27;re reliable: the spring pressure ensures they never come loose, even with vibration and heat over many years. I&#x27;m never going back to twist-on wire nuts.<p>Ruby. The seamless blend of OO, functional, and imperative programming is beautiful. It can be dense without being obscure. irb and pry make it easy to explore code and data. The syntax is mostly conventional and easy to learn. The standard libraries are well designed, and have consistent interfaces. The documentation is concise and easy to scan. I won&#x27;t say its &quot;The Best&quot;, but of the dynamic, interpreted languages I know, Ruby is the most fun to use, and it starts with the clean, well-considered design right at its core.
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raz32dustover 3 years ago
Google flights is fantastic. Don&#x27;t know if it is &quot;the best-designed thing I&#x27;ve ever used&quot;, but it is on top of my mind as I just used it yesterday. Google doesn&#x27;t get enough credit for the things that they did do well - including Search and Maps.<p>Another is Macbooks - the pre-2015 ones at least. I haven&#x27;t used the latest M1 ones, which I hear great things about. The Aluminum body, the flawless screen, magsafe, great sound - there is so many things I love about Macbook hardware. Such a beautiful marriage of form and function.
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Datageneratorover 3 years ago
ZFS. Complete research companies unknowingly depend on the utmost reliability and flexibility ZFS has to offer. Started right with the first version included in FreeBSD in production use and never failed once while being the central storage connected to multiple HPC clusters with millions upon millions of rather small but also some vary large files. While offering five nines of uptime we even had to ability to send efficient binary forever incremental differential snapshots to remote DR locations. Meanwhile we saw many large crashed sites at companies which had downtimes of weeks using lustre. ZFS even got hated by management because it&#x27;s not giving them fancy relationships with the normies using HP&#x2F;Dell. So the last ten years are probably the best ZFS got here because some instructed architect is looking for commercial replacement but nothing better seems available.
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japhyrover 3 years ago
If you split your own firewood by hand, a Fiskars splitting axe is insanely better than any standard splitting maul you&#x27;d find in a typical hardware store: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.fiskars.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;gardening-and-yard-care&#x2F;products&#x2F;axes-mauls-and-machetes&#x2F;x27-super-splitting-axe-36-378841-1004" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.fiskars.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;gardening-and-yard-care&#x2F;produc...</a><p>For mechanical pencils, the Rotring 600 is the best thing I&#x27;ve ever written with: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;B00AZWYUA4&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;B00AZWYUA4&#x2F;</a>
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MrDresdenover 3 years ago
I have no one thing (these are the things that pop into my mind, all within their own category&#x2F;niche);<p>* My <i>Hilleberg Akto</i> single person hiking tent scores very highly. It is designed for lightness, durability and simplicity when setting up. It can better be set up&#x2F;torn down by one person in a storm than most other tents I&#x27;ve owned.<p>* My <i>Leatherman</i> multitool has been with me for years in some fairly bad conditions. It just keeps working and sometimes in ways that I hadn&#x27;t imagine it could be used.<p>* My <i>Aeropress</i> portable coffee maker is in my mind amazingly designed and portable for making a decent cup of coffee anywhere in the world.<p>* <i>SSH</i> is simply amazing. I think it can be overly too easy to forget what it gives us the ability to do.<p>* <i>SQLite</i>. It is amazingly designed in pretty much any way you can look at it (requirements, speed, size, resource use etc).<p>* My <i>Kindle</i> (and other such devices) is an amazing piece of tech. I carry around my whole library in only a few hundred grams, and its power usage levels are so low that I need only charge it for an hour or so each month.<p>* The <i>Kotlin</i> programming language. Such a breath of fresh air after having been stuck with Java (pre 9) on Android for so long.<p>* Android&#x27;s new UI design toolkit <i>Jetpack Compose</i> is a seismic shift in <i>native</i> Android development where everything looks and feels like it has had some serious thought put in behind it.<p>These are obviously subjective, and I have no longing to get into discussions on the merrits of the software I mention here. There are plenty of places that has been done before.
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amarshallover 3 years ago
The Kinesis Advantage keyboard [1]. The height of the keys in each column are different because, well, the length of each of our fingers is different. It’s so naturally comfortable that it goes unnoticed and one’s fingers just fall into the right position. Placing one’s fingers offset left or right is so obviously uncomfortable that it’s basically impossible to have off-by-one typos. There is a lot of subtly well-designed ergonomics to this keyboard (though also some not great bits—looking at you, function row).<p>[1]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;kinesis-ergo.com&#x2F;shop&#x2F;advantage2&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;kinesis-ergo.com&#x2F;shop&#x2F;advantage2&#x2F;</a>
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grechover 3 years ago
This may be a normie response - but Apple Airpods Pro are one of the best products I&#x27;ve used. After years of using several bluetooth headsets that get finicky (with connections that is), having a set that just connects and works every single time is refreshing. They really changed my behavior - I went from not liking phone conversations at all (getting agitated after a few minutes)to comfortably having long phone calls. I would replace mine immediately if they were lost &#x2F; broken.
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wh313over 3 years ago
My Aeropress coffee maker. It feels more convenient than a french press, and much cheaper than an espresso machine.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aeropress.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aeropress.com&#x2F;</a><p>Also a bidet. Americans really need to start using it more.
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squarefootover 3 years ago
I loved the SanDisk Sansa Clip Zip players I owned during past years. They needed to be reflashed with the RockBox firmware (but tbh pretty much every portable player firmware is inferior to RockBox) however hardware wise they were fantastic: light, well shaped, buttons in the right places, very readable display despite the small size, audio was excellent, FM reception too, battery lasted hours and hours. I brought them on the beach and kept them running for hours while sunbathing or walking like 1 meter above sea level, and they worked for years. I had to ditch them eventually when the headphone jack began to fail, but that happened when the battery had already became old and other buttons unreliable, so repair which was often destructive was out of question. Unfortunately SanDisk cut corners in later models (less RAM, smaller CPU etc.) and RockBox became harder or impossible to install, so I got a much cheaper Agptek player, which can&#x27;t run RockBox as well but costs a fraction, and that&#x27;s it.
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anderscoover 3 years ago
The Technics SL-1200 turntable. The fact that the design has not changed except for minor tweaks since the product was released speaks for itself. I used it both as a DJ many years ago and now kept one of the turntables just for listening. The quality of the turntable is palpable not only in its physical weight but in the utter simplicity of the design. The dotted edges of the rotating plate are both aesthetically pleasing while also informative communicating rotation speed. Every detail every little part of the unit is functional design of the highest quality while also visually appealing. In my view one of the greatest achievements in modern electronics and industrial design.
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pxeger1over 3 years ago
YouTube&#x27;s video player (almost the entire rest of the site is beyond crap, don&#x27;t get me wrong! I&#x27;m just talking about the watching experience) (assuming you have an ad-blocker, which you obviously should). Plenty of other video players have <i>some</i> of these features, but YouTube has almost everything.<p>- click to pause<p>- double-click to fullscreen<p>- customisable captions<p>- speed controls<p>- sensible keyboard shortcuts for practically everything (press ? to see them all)<p>- theatre mode<p>- picture-in-picture<p>- loop (on the right-click menu)<p>- dark theme<p>- all settings are saved and synced across multiple tabs (with the irritating exception of video speed, but that can be fixed with a browser extension)<p>- hover to preview<p>- drag to seek<p>- video chapters<p>- clear and subtle indication of video buffering<p>- auto-resume when you come back to a video after navigating away<p>- easy and obvious translation of all controls to live-streams and &quot;premieres&quot;<p>- pretty animations and obvious cursor changes that make it really obvious what you&#x27;re doing (looking at you, Twitch)<p>- you can scroll in fullscreen<p>- &quot;instant&quot; page navigation that never gets out of sync with itself<p>- 4K support<p>- HDR support (not very good, but still)<p>- 60+FPS support<p>- 360° support<p>- all of Google&#x27;s CDN resources behind it so it never lags<p>- excellent video quality detection that never picks an unnecessarily low-quality option when my computer could handle better, nor a too-high one that my connection can&#x27;t manage
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f0e4c2f7over 3 years ago
Crock Pot. Cheap and makes cooking feel easy.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Crock-Pot-SCV700SS-Stainless-7-Quart-Manual&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B003OAJGJO" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Crock-Pot-SCV700SS-Stainless-7-Quart-...</a><p>OP-1. Expensive and makes music feel easy.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Teenage-Engineering-002-AS-001-OP-1-Synthesizer&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B00CXSJUZS&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Teenage-Engineering-002-AS-001-OP-1-S...</a><p>LG Tone Flex HBS-XL7. The best earbuds with the worst name. I really like this form factor. I often forget that I&#x27;m wearing them and this particular model is the most comfortable of the ones I&#x27;ve used over the years.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;LG-HBS-XL7-Bluetooth-Wireless-Neckband&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B07WQ9LP6H&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;LG-HBS-XL7-Bluetooth-Wireless-Neckban...</a><p>Kindle Paperwhite. I have the older model. I&#x27;ve heard the nooks are good too. The simpler the better. Nothing to break or distract. Don&#x27;t use the backlight and the battery lasts ages. I know a lot of people are partial to physical books but I&#x27;ve read hundreds more books than I might have otherwise read since I started using my kindle. It&#x27;s probably my favorite thing I own.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;All-new-kindle-paperwhite&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B08N38WQSH&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;All-new-kindle-paperwhite&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B08N38WQ...</a>
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raffraffraffover 3 years ago
Garmin Fenix 5s Sapphire: notifications from my phone with custom replies, 6 day battery life, buttons. No touch screen (operate it &quot;blind&quot; and in the wet), waterproof, scratchproof. You do need to pay extra for the sapphire screen.<p>Swiss Army knife (they&#x27;re sooo well made)<p>Under armour underwear: no seams, last ages, extremely comfortable.<p>Darn tough socks: extremely comfortable, last forever, never smell.<p>Altra Lone Peak trainers: foot shaped, light, comfortable, quick-dry. Right now every pair of shoes I own are Altra (but I&#x27;m trying out Topo Athletic phantom 2 next)<p>Gore-Tex. And Neoprene.<p>Docker. People like to hate a winner, and they&#x27;ve gone the paid route, and they did just take already-available kernel features and wrap them up... But man, they did it well and they revolutionised software development and deployment.<p>Debian, XFCE, Tailscale, Syncthing, rsync, ssh, ffmpeg
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erikschosterover 3 years ago
Legos; also the ender 3d printer. I had a nostalgic time putting the ender together. Felt like a lego set. That&#x27;s not saying it was trivial (it challenged me) but that I trusted it every step of the way not because of previous experience, but because of the obvious well-designed aspects of the experience as I was putting it together. For example: I put on a part sloppily, and trying to attach anther part was the first real resistance I felt in the entire process -- physical that is, I had to study every page of the manual for a minute or two before even being able to figure out what the next step would need to be, but it was always clear after studying.
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mikewarotover 3 years ago
Turbo Pascal 7, then Borland Delphi 5 were the most productive programming environments ever. Very few bugs, wicked fast, and full proper documentation.<p>Nothing since comes even close.
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kryogen1cover 3 years ago
i dont know if this is exactly in or exactly out of the HN wheelhouse, but: my keychain. it&#x27;s a small hoop of plastic-coated braided strand cable with two threaded ends that screw together.<p>the plastic coating hasn&#x27;t ripped, torn, loosened, or discolored. none of the metal has rusted. the thread pitch is big enough to screw and unscrew quickly but small enough to not loosen on its own and has good clamping force. the threaded end for passing through keys is small enough for all my fobs and keys. its tough and strong but pleasant to handle. no part of it is worse for wear even though i fidget with it and have changed keys multiple times. it also currently has like 11 keys and a large fob on it. ive had it for ~5 years and I&#x27;m fairly certain it&#x27;s the most reliable thing i own. it&#x27;s easy to use and easy to understand and it always does its job.<p>and to top it all off, it was like 70 cents.<p>it&#x27;s a god damn marvel.<p>looks like this, although mine is smaller:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;i.ebayimg.com&#x2F;images&#x2F;i&#x2F;281726615218-0-1&#x2F;s-l1000.jpg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;i.ebayimg.com&#x2F;images&#x2F;i&#x2F;281726615218-0-1&#x2F;s-l1000.jpg</a>
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nikiviover 3 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;linear.app" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;linear.app</a> is great. I list all sites I love here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wiki.nikitavoloboev.xyz&#x2F;design&#x2F;design-inspiration#websites" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wiki.nikitavoloboev.xyz&#x2F;design&#x2F;design-inspiration#we...</a>
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brundolfover 3 years ago
I genuinely loved the second-generation Zune. The aluminum case felt lovely in the hand, it had swipe-based momentum scrolling before that was common (without even a touchscreen!). It had a matte paint on the front that felt almost like velvet, the buttons clicked nicely, the UI was both gorgeous and practical, the desktop software was the same (after the first couple revisions). I was really sad when mine got stolen from my dorm room a couple years after I got it, even though I had a smartphone by that point.<p>Bonus entry: the GameCube controller. With that huge, luscious analog stick and that huge, luscious A button. And the overall shape fit the hand really nicely too. For any game that didn&#x27;t make prominent use of the secondary analog stick, I think it was and still is the best game controller out there.
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_jstreetover 3 years ago
I find it interesting that most of the comments are about physical products.<p>The &#x27;best design&#x27; is often something that&#x27;s so frictionless and easy to use that it&#x27;s invisible in day-to-day use. Everyday infrastructure like steps are something that&#x27;s noticeable when they&#x27;re off (e.g. spaced too far apart, or too steep); most are designed well.<p>It&#x27;s easy to find things that are designed poorly. But much less tangible to find a &#x27;best designed&#x27; item.
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stillblueover 3 years ago
The Apple Ecosystem.<p>I&#x27;ve invested a lot of hard earned money into it. I have an ipad, iphone, a macbook air, an apple watch, airpods pro and a mac mini. Bought these over the years.<p>Just the way these things work so cohesively to me is pure magic. The attention to detail on extremely minor things is pretty impressive. I haven&#x27;t had to think about &quot;doing&quot; anything with tech ever since I bought apple products. You just remember to charge them and everything just works. I come from a pure windows &#x2F; android background and I was mindblown by how convenient things were.<p>I&#x27;d highly recommend Apple devices to friends and family.
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cc101over 3 years ago
US Forest Service picnic table. 3 kinds of simple flat cement castings. Held together by their own weight. Easily carried and assembled by two men. Cheap. Almost indestructible.
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acomjeanover 3 years ago
My Honda Element. It’s so versatile with the large side loading doors and the flip down removable back seats. You can toss a bike inside easily. It also is surprising short and has a small turning radius. I put 200000 miles on my first one before buying a second. Not a great looker though.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.core77.com&#x2F;posts&#x2F;61976&#x2F;The-Honda-Elements-Unsung-Interior-Design-Brilliance" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.core77.com&#x2F;posts&#x2F;61976&#x2F;The-Honda-Elements-Unsung...</a>
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thihtover 3 years ago
I love my electric toothbrush. It cost me 20 bucks and it’s amazing. I analyzed it from a UX point of view and couldn’t come up with any designs flaw.<p>- it’s waterproof, so easy to clean<p>- it has a single physical button, nothing else<p>- it has a small flat stand on the back, so I can put it somewhere horizontally and it won’t roll, and the brush won’t touch the surface<p>- the heads can be easily changed, so we share the same toothbrush with my SO but have our own brush. The heads have a different color ring so they’re easy to recognize<p>- the charging station is small, holds in place and is generally painless. You just put the toothbrush on it and that’s it<p>- the battery itself easily lasts 2 weeks<p>- when using it the brush buzzes every 30 seconds but that’s it, you can ignore it if you wish. If you accidentally turn the brush off but turn it back on quickly, it remembers where you were and won’t start the buzzes from the beginning<p>- the best thing about electric toothbrush is that they gracefully degrade to a normal toothbrush. I love graceful degradation<p>I talked about users of more expensive electric toothbrushes (100-200$), but I’m confident mine is the best.
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PaulDavisThe1stover 3 years ago
Arcteryx Bora 95 backpack. Big, heavy, but super-durable and what you need if you&#x27;re doing long backpacking trips and are not of the contemporary super-lightweight inclination. Mine is 25 years old and everything is still perfect. Out of production, their current backpacks are no substitute (and they know it).<p>Dewalt power tools. Not absolutely perfect, but normally everything about them just seems right, and the durability over 28+ years so far has been perfect (with one exception: a jammed chainsaw motor).<p>My Bourgeat 24cm vertical-sided saute pan. When I moved from Seattle to Phila. in 1996, I drove 400 miles out of my way to pick this up from a tiny kitchen store on the Oregon coast. It is the best kitchen tool I have ever owned. 25 years later, it remains my go-to pan for more than half of my cooking. Encased copper base, stainless body, I can burn the shit out of something in here, and after a night&#x27;s soaking it cleans up like new with almost no effort. Sadly, although Bourgeat are still in business, they dropped this particular model a few years after I bought it.<p>Sandisk Clip+ music player. This is far from perfect, but it&#x27;s also so far ahead of almost everything else when it comes to portable music <i>while exercising</i>. No touch sensing, just physical buttons, usable with gloves of various sizes. Storage size limited only by SD card availability (I&#x27;m at 120GB right now, could go larger). Battery lasts longer than I tend to remember. Rockbox firmware makes it work better. Plays every format that matter, plus a few that don&#x27;t. Tiny, weighs almost nothing. Not what I want to listen to at home, but if I&#x27;m out running, cycling, skiing, snowshoeing ... I&#x27;ve just never found a better device. Out of production.<p>Ableton Push 2 control surface for DAW workflows. The tactile quality is outstanding, the screen quality is gorgeous, the knobs have just the right level of resistance to turning, it&#x27;s just a thing of beauty. But what makes it so much better is that Ableton fully documented every aspect of this beast, which allowed me to make it work with my own software. The documentation is almost as lovely as the Push 2 itself.
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indroraover 3 years ago
Four things come to mind:<p>* The AK-47. Love or hate guns, the AK was designed with tolerances that encouraged simultaneously good maintenance patterns and using it as a gorram hammer if the need came to it. * Nalgene bottles. Impact resistant, infinitely screen printable, polycarbonate body, cheap and everything you could want. * The venerable aluminum drinks can: The sheer amount of engineering that has gone into making a bit of aluminum for canning but with the design constraints of pressure and temperature, it&#x27;s a very neat design. * Fluxx, the game. Fluxx has one rule, the only base rule: Draw a card, play a card. There&#x27;s no resolution order, no many pages of legalese text like Magic. There is Fluxx.<p>And that&#x27;s one of the things that makes Fluxx well designed. I can teach someone how to play Fluxx in 30 seconds: &quot;Draw a card, play a card. When the conditions for winning have been achieved, the game ends.&quot; The one thing I don&#x27;t like about Fluxx is the later addition of Creepers, but those are easily one of the most write-off-able types of cards ever created.
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micro_camover 3 years ago
Knipex Plier Wrenches ... so much better than an adjustable wrench and useful for all sorts of small tasks beyond bolts.<p>Park AWS-1 three way hex wrench. Makes working on bikes so much faster.<p>Dynafit Ski Touring Bindings... the patent has expired and there are loads of copy&#x27;s based on the original idea now but they changed the sport of ski touring in a way that can&#x27;t be overstated. (tlt5&#x2F;6 boots and now the scarpa alien rs are up there too as well as modern powder skis)<p>Petzl Nomic Ice Tools. Again much imitated but they way they work with the human body to make climbing ice (or rock) easier was revolutionary and is something you can feel just by picking them up.<p>Leica M6 - or m series in general. what if we made a camera from a squished piece of pipe.
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harrydehalover 3 years ago
Sony MDR7506 Professional headphones -- haven&#x27;t changed since the 80s (on which a lot of classics have been recorded&#x2F;mixed with).<p>Honda S2000, particularly the F20C 2002-2003 model years. High-revving 9000 RPM redline, completely driver-focused cockpit (tachometer from the Senna-era Honda Mclaren F1 cars), minimal computers besides ABS, hidden radio, et al. Bolt-action gearbox. The driving experience is sublime.
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timemachineover 3 years ago
Kitchenaid direct-drive stand mixer. I have one from the 1950s that has been used multiple times a week since it was bought new by my grandmother.<p>The dough hook, whisk, and other attachments secure in place with machined fittings so there is no play or wiggle. This has made them last.<p>I took the top off of it 10 years ago to make sure it was still properly lubricated. That’s all the maintenance it has ever had. (Well I broke one of the Pyrex mixing bowls…but eBay)
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ethbr0over 3 years ago
Oxo&#x27;s old style ice cream spade (apparently discontinued?) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.surlatable.com&#x2F;oxo-ice-cream-spade&#x2F;PRO-208926.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.surlatable.com&#x2F;oxo-ice-cream-spade&#x2F;PRO-208926.ht...</a><p>Solves all the problems with an ice cream scoop. Critically, this version had a rounded front. They seem to have moved to a straight front, which I can&#x27;t imagine being as effective?<p>40s&#x2F;50s Gillette Super Speed <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.badgerandblade.com&#x2F;forum&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Gillette_40s_Style_Super_Speed" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.badgerandblade.com&#x2F;forum&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Gillette_40s_Style...</a><p>Shaving was a cheaply and effectively solved problem by the 1950s. Everything since then has been bullshit.
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stephenfinover 3 years ago
I&#x27;m amazed no one has suggested Chromecast. It just works. Click a button on your phone or laptop and the video or song you were listening to or want to listen to suddenly appears on the TV. Even grandparents seem to get it. Maybe Apple TV is a similar experience but Chromecast is as good as it gets
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efitzover 3 years ago
My 2000 model year BMW M roadster.<p>Not counting the radio, the car had a tiny number of buttons and switches- window up&#x2F;down, headlight knob, and 5 buttons. There was nothing extraneous or redundant. There were no door lock buttons- the lock indicator was the button to lock the door, and the door open handle was the unlock button.<p>Also, every darn control in the car was exactly where it was supposed to be. It’s hard to describe it, but even from the very first time sitting in the car, I never had to search or guess how to operate anything. I would think about needing to do something, put my hand where I thought the control would be, and there it was.<p>I’ve never had a machine delight me like that car in its simplicity and elegance of design.
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DoneWithAllThatover 3 years ago
Leerburg police leash (for dogs), although the one they sell now is (of course) a crappier version of the one I’ve owned for 10 years now. It’s a leash with a snap at both ends, and three o rings at different points along the length to attach the top snap. It can be held like a regular leash, or slung over your shoulder if you’re for example at an outdoor eating place. I keep it on the shortest length while on walks on sidewalks and at the longest on parks and such. It’s so amazing I’m shocked it’s not a standard leash design you can buy in pet stores.
joe-collinsover 3 years ago
Such a little thing, but: the Rules Reference card in introductory-level Magic: The Gathering products. Magic&#x27;s full rules are 250 pages of legal-lite text, and yet, this little folded insert, with just five cardface&#x27;s worth of text, amply covers everything a complete beginner needs to play. It&#x27;s a brilliant example of cutting an explanation to the bare minimum and piggybacking on background knowledge.
krisrmover 3 years ago
&quot;Things&quot; is pretty broad.<p>Thinking of software, probably early &quot;beta&quot; Gmail. There was so much about the email experience that was improved by a stable web client, with what felt at the time like unlimited storage.<p>Thinking of hardware, I&#x27;ve never been much for Apple products, but the iPhone (particularly early models) is undoubtedly a design marvel.
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langcalvinover 3 years ago
I&#x27;ll go a game route: Mario Kart. It&#x27;s just so perfect. All of them from the SNES to the Switch.<p>I&#x27;ve played countless hours and never get bored. The level designs are all so interesting and unique I find myself discovering something new every time. It&#x27;s social and I&#x27;ve seen it dominate dinner parties.
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jzellisover 3 years ago
My Doc Martens. The design of a shoe is pretty well worked out, but the devil is in the details, and my Docs have been carrying my fat ass through deserts and snow and jungles and cobblestones and pavement for twenty years, and I got em used. That&#x27;s not just down to materials, it&#x27;s down to design.<p>The Gerber Chameleon (and its Remix followup) pocket knife design. (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gerber-tools.com&#x2F;Gerber-Remix-22-01969.php" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gerber-tools.com&#x2F;Gerber-Remix-22-01969.php</a>) Absolutely brilliant - the pivot itself is a ring, so when you use the knife you have zero chance of slipping and cutting yourself, and instead of a side to side motion for cutting, you just use your hand naturally, the way you would a handsaw.<p>And the iPad stand and mount I use, whose brand escapes me. It folds compact to fit in a bag and the legs and main clamp separate for easy carrying, but the feet pivot outward or can be used, when pivoted inward together, as a base that can be slid into a holder (that came with it) or anything that can hold it up. I often slip the feet behind the vertical pipes in our kitchen to watch videos while I&#x27;m doing dishes, and I&#x27;ve built a lap desk that uses pipe strapping to allow me to slide the stand feet underneath the desktop, so the iPad itself doesn&#x27;t take up any space at all on the desktop - it&#x27;s just hovering over it like an IKEA worklight. Fantastically simple and useful design.
hn_throwaway_99over 3 years ago
It kind of pains me to say this, but I&#x27;ll say Sonos from about 5-6 years ago. When I first got a couple speakers, I touted it as the best consumer electronics experience I&#x27;d ever had to except maybe some Apple products.<p>Unfortunately, it has been consistently downhill the past couple of years. What used to &quot;just work&quot; now constantly has issues and glitches, and speakers I got just a few years ago that work great are now essentially EOLed in their software. I&#x27;ve definitely purchased my last Sonos product.
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version_fiveover 3 years ago
Shopify pay (I think that&#x27;s the name) that texts a code to complete the checkout at web stores I think is a great friction reducer.<p>Modern tents that just have a couple of elastic cord connected structural members the tent hangs off that go up in seconds. Anyone who put up a tent 25 years ago must see how much innovation there has been.<p>Almost everything about cars - if you think of the conditions and amount of use they have to survive (and despite massive annoying failures). I had a Mazda 3 with rain sensing wipers that I loved, I&#x27;ve driven lots of more expensive cars without them and I don&#x27;t understand why they&#x27;re not ubiquitous
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epsover 3 years ago
Thermapen<p>Unfold, stick in, see the temperature.<p>If it&#x27;s dark, it will highlight the screen, If it&#x27;s upside down, it will flip the screen.<p>Very fast, because it uses gradient descend and not linear estimation.<p>Pull it out, place it down and it switches off. Move it, it switches on.<p>Single moving part, no buttons. You want it in Farneheights - open it up with a screwdriver, flip a microswitch.<p>Fairly big in size for no other reason but to be convenient to hold and to read.<p>Battery last for ages.<p>And on top of all that it is also very well made.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.thermoworks.com&#x2F;thermapen-mk4&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.thermoworks.com&#x2F;thermapen-mk4&#x2F;</a>
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donatjover 3 years ago
My Cuisinart PerfectTemp water kettle.<p>I bought it 11 years ago, a couple years after moving out. It was more expensive than many of its competitors, but the build quality seemed worth the investment. Early in my career, it was a big investment.<p>I have used it nearly every single day in that time, and honestly never stopped to think about it until now. It&#x27;s been a fixture of my life. Other than the occasional descaling, it&#x27;s been perfect without maintenance.<p>Beyond that, as someone who drinks a lot of coffee - I&#x27;d also like to mention my classic Bunn coffee maker. It has a reservoir of water it keeps hot, the new water you add displaces the old water like a water heater, so you&#x27;re able to make an entire pot of coffee in under 3 minutes.
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JohnJamesRamboover 3 years ago
The Bic Cristal pen. Works flawlessly and uses the ink all the way until it is gone.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Bic_Cristal" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Bic_Cristal</a>
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Havocover 3 years ago
Zojirushi rice cookers. Even though the shell is plastic it has a durable feel to it like you don&#x27;t find it kitchen appliances anymore. It&#x27;ll still work in 20+ years type feel
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enobrevover 3 years ago
My original cast iron pans.<p>I bought this no-name set of three from a small family-run neighborhood hardware store in Brooklyn for $20 somewhere around 2002. The guy behind the counter was surprised by the price and that they even had cast iron pans. I&#x27;ve used them regularly since. They&#x27;re the oldest cookware in my kitchen by a large margin.<p>I&#x27;ve taken them camping, and I cook with then in my kitchen daily. I&#x27;ve cooked any food imaginable in them, from crepes, to patched eggs, to pizza, to all sorts of meats and stews and sauces - on the stove and in the oven. And they still work as well and look like the day I first pre-seasoned them.
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OccamsRazrover 3 years ago
20+ year old farm equipment. They are easy to use, simple to maintain, often repairable by the farmer on-site (with perhaps a trip to the store to buy a small part). I often found myself marvelling at the complex things that could be achieved by an arrangement of gears, such as the contraption on a square baler that wraps the bale with two pieces of twine and ties two perfectly tensioned knots that will hold the hay together in that shape for years.
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kevinwangover 3 years ago
Robinhood was my first experience with stocks, and attempting to use a traditional broker&#x27;s interface has really made me appreciate how good Robinhood&#x27;s UI is. I guess it&#x27;s one of those &quot;you don&#x27;t notice when it&#x27;s working well&quot; kind of things.
apengwinover 3 years ago
Craigslist. The UI is extremely streamlined. Everything is either a Cmd-F or a search away. it&#x27;s a brutalist masterpiece
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idlewordsover 3 years ago
Any Japanese bathtub. It&#x27;s deep, you can fill it to the very top, and it&#x27;s designed to overflow rather than deprive you of the top 1&#x2F;3 with an annoying safety drain.
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ivanechover 3 years ago
Mamiya 7 camera. It is ergonomically great, especially considering its size and large film area (6x7). Good shutter button with a lock.<p>Its 65mm lens is amazing to use - the edges line up almost perfectly with the massive rangefinder window, so it&#x27;s like taking a picture of what one eye sees. This is great because I believe the best images are the ones that look like seeing, that make it seem as if beauty is commonplace.
djsbsover 3 years ago
- HP products before Corina took over. Especially the HP-28s and HP-48GX<p>Hp basically put a lisp machine into your hands. The 28 is better than the 48 except for I&#x2F;O, battery door, and screen and CPU speed. (What can I say. I love the clamshell)<p>- mechanically, anything by Honda<p>- Lada Niva. A relative has one in S. American. While out w&#x2F; him a cop pulled us over just to tell my uncle that he had better: “take good care of my little Russian!”
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temporallobeover 3 years ago
Late to this thread as usual, but I might as well submit mine:<p>My Fender Telecaster. It’s a paradigm of simplicity, reliability, playability, and tone. From the original barrel-style string saddles to the 2-pickup&#x2F;3-way switching system to the high-output single coil to the bolt-on neck construction to the straight string-pull head stock, there is no better guitar on the planet. What’s even more impressive is that it was designed by a non-guitarist and was one of Leo Fenders earliest designs (and is largely considered to be the first mass-produced electric guitar). I own far too many guitars of various styles and cost, but I nearly <i>always</i> perform and record with my Tele. It’s my proverbial desert island guitar.
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sanderjdover 3 years ago
The Aeropress. I&#x27;ve made coffee in all sorts of different ways over the years, but for me this is the one that strikes the perfect balance between flavor and convenience. After a long period of making french press coffee, it was an absolute revelation the first time I popped out the little nugget of spent grounds from the Aeropress.
CommieBobDoleover 3 years ago
IBM Model M keyboard. Great to type on, just works.<p>Built June 2, 1987. I&#x27;ve been typing on it for 20 years myself, never had any problems except issues with the third-party USB converter not playing nice with some KVM hardware. And I guess the time I spilled coffee in it.
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rstat1over 3 years ago
I have to say one of my new favorite tools as of this year is Tailscale.<p>To steal Apple&#x27;s annoying marketing phrase: It just works. I&#x27;ve never had to fiddle with it&#x27;s settings or spend a bunch time figuring out configuration crap. I just install, and login and that&#x27;s it. There&#x27;s no need to care about manually configuring Wireguard devices or to care about key management, which I would think would get annoying quick as you add in more and more devices.
nicbouover 3 years ago
MDN and the NHS website are some of the best knowledge base websites I know. Each do a really good job of communicating information. They put a lot of thought into the language they use and it shows.
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cainxinthover 3 years ago
Corded Wahl professional hair clippers. It’s the AK-47 of hair styling products: indestructible, never jams, and incredibly low maintenance. Clean out the detritus and give it a little oil now and then and it will work practically forever.
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TheRealSteelover 3 years ago
The Galaxy Z Fold 3 I&#x27;m typing this on is really well implemented. It&#x27;s not perfect but it&#x27;s a marvel of engineering and an excellent implementation of an ambitious idea.<p>The app Sync for Reddit Pro has basically precisely the UI I want from a reddit app. There&#x27;s almost nothing I would change.<p>I absolutely love the feel of just about every part of the Xbox One controller, and you can even get back buttons on the Elite model.<p>My 2005 Prius feels great to sit in and operate. Foot operated park brake, keyless entry and pushbutton start, comfortable seating and controls, plenty of space, sensible layout.<p>All models of Macbook Pro except the TouchBar era have been a pleasure to use.
kunleover 3 years ago
Pic&#x27;s creamy peanut butter: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;picspb.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;creamy-pb" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;picspb.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;creamy-pb</a><p>I don&#x27;t even care for peanut butter and this just hits. Super smooth, not too sweet - i eat it by the spoonful. I literally did not think there was any difference between different peanut butter brands until I had Pic&#x27;s.
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edmcnulty101over 3 years ago
These are the brands Ive had good success with, almost everything Ive bought has met or exceeded my expectations:<p>Apple, Levis, Patagonia&#x2F;LL Bean&#x2F;North Face, Garmin smartwatch, Goruck, Toyota, Bosch or Milwaukee tools, Fender, Sonicare, Thule, Yakima, Ankur cables, weather tech floormats.<p>Well designed websites:<p>Google, Old reddit, and HN, can&#x27;t believe they&#x27;ve stayed true all these years.<p>Brands, I or a friend, has had extremely poor success with, enough to call out:<p>Dell (their quality control dropped off, I think, they used to be great), Amazon Basics, Mini Cooper, Fitbit, Beats by Dre, Goal Zero Yeti, new Reddit.
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4kellyover 3 years ago
Darn Tough socks. You won’t be able to go back. Great feel, super durable, different styles and thickness for any use-case.<p>Oh and a lifetime warranty (I have personality returned one pair 5 years later for a new pair).
scandoxover 3 years ago
A garlic press. It&#x27;s the only thing I ever asked my parents for that they owned. They had it since the 70s.<p>The reason I know it&#x27;s great is because all the others I&#x27;ve ever used are inferior.<p>This one is in two distinct pieces which you place together to work. The metal is kind of grey and dull but it&#x27;s incredibly strong.<p>It&#x27;s easy to clean. Indestructible. Powerful.
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etseover 3 years ago
Toyota Sienna minivan. Having driven only sedans and coupes, and grew up riding in 90s-era SUVs, I was shocked to discover what modern &quot;minivan life&quot; is like... as a parent. For me, my reference for modern is the past two weeks of a mundane 2010 Sienna LE. Every couple days, I notice something new and thoughtful.<p>The side doors are powered and can be controlled from the remote, since kids won&#x27;t often open doors for themselves or you.<p>The last row of seats can fold down flush with the floor, since we alternate between having more cargo space and passenger capacity (like trips with grandparents or for instance, equipment for sports or music).<p>The car windows come tinted. One less worry&#x2F;discussion about harsh glare or sunlight on our young kids.<p>There&#x27;s a second lighter outlet right beside the first, which is handy for our electricity-dependent lifestyle.<p>There is a compartment on the driver&#x27;s side, near your head, that reveals sunglasses.<p>There are cupholders upon cupholders on every interior panel, which seemed absurd to me, until I saw them used by my own family. And when you&#x27;ve filled them all, pop open the coin tray and a slow reveal unfolds... yet another cupholder, like digging into the hesitation before the punchline of a joke.<p>Newer minivans cover more use cases, like automatically popping the rear door by waving your leg, or changing the middle row positions to accommodate side-by-side car seats, and I&#x27;m curious to see which features have staying power and which don&#x27;t.<p>We often applaud elegant solutions to a well-defined problem as a good design, or at least I feel like software engineers tend to, but I have a growing admiration for designs that solve a problem complex enough to resist being defined once-and-for-all. Those problems tend to be &quot;human&quot; problems that are as deep as human psychology and change as our society changes.
analog31over 3 years ago
My double bass, &quot;designed&quot; in the 17th century, gradually evolved over the years, made in Romania in 2010.<p>Sturmey-Archer AW 3-speed bicycle gear hub. I&#x27;m running 2 of them, both 50+ years old, still going strong. Originally designed in 1948.<p>Pretty much anything made by Mitutoyo, glorious quality and aesthetics.<p>&quot;Ideal Stripmaster&quot; wire stripper.
MildlySeriousover 3 years ago
In terms of physical things, my Audio Technica ATH-M50x headphones. I have been quite literally wearing them all day, every day for the past three years and got no complaints.
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gnicholasover 3 years ago
Pebble Time Steel. I’ve played with other similar watches, like the Fossil hybrid smartwatches, but those can’t touch the software and other design aspects that Pebble nailed back in the day. I wish it could last forever!
FreeInFloridaover 3 years ago
KitchenCraft pots and pans <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;waterlesscookware.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;waterlesscookware.com&#x2F;</a><p>We paid $1,000 (a LOT of money) for our set when we were just married in 1980. Every piece of that set still looks like new, with a mirror finish, and every lid handle and pot handle is still tight like it just came out of the box. They are naturally non-stick, cook everything with only a tiny bit of water, and are indestructible. The ones pictured on the website today look exactly like the ones we have used daily for 40 years, since they cannot be improved upon. Made in Wisconsin since 1906 and every piece is guaranteed forever.<p>They are only sold direct or at county fairs, home improvement shows and the like, but they are worth the high price since you will NEVER need to replace them.
elil17over 3 years ago
I love Pleco as a Chinese dictionary.<p>Most Chinese dictionaries have a different search bar for English words and latinized Chinese words (pinyin). Pleco let’s you toggle your search from English to pinyin and back again with a button. It also lets you navigate from words to their characters and from characters to words that use them.<p>Most importantly, it color coded characters so you can see how they’re pronounced more easily which is incredibly useful for beginners.
2020randomover 3 years ago
I used to have a large dobsonian telescope made by Orion. It had a good quality mirror. It came with features like automatic tracking.<p>In general, a dobsonion telescope has a simple design that made it cheap and easier to use compared to other telescope setups. The dobsonion mount also allowed for a large aperture that would have been unwieldy otherwise. For me, it is an example of how complex things can be made simpler and easier to use.
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joelhaasnootover 3 years ago
Palm OS<p>Simple yet efficient, solving everyday problems and having some of the best apps. You are missed almost daily.
jp57over 3 years ago
The Fender Telecaster guitar. Simple, versatile, reliable. The design is essentially unchanged since it’s debut in the 1950s and still popular today.
jounkerover 3 years ago
The Aerostich Roadcrafter single piece motorcycle suit. It’s not the best protection, it’s not the most weather resistant, it’s not the warmest in cool weather, it’s no the best ventilated in warm weather, but it is the best all round motorcycle suit I’ve worn.<p>Best of all you can step into or out of one faster than most people can take off a jacket. Every time I put it on I feel a rush of joy and satisfaction.
jpgvmover 3 years ago
I&#x27;m an avid collector of Japanese chef knives. They are not only beautiful but design of each of the distinct blade shapes have been honed over hundreds of years for usability. Using a knife for the job it was designed for is a very pleasurable experience.
craniumover 3 years ago
It will only talk to Swiss people but we have an app called Fairtiq that makes taking a ticket for public transport super easy. You basically swipe in when you enter the bus&#x2F;train&#x2F;boat and swipe out when you arrived at your destination. It can be many changes or hours later and the right tickets are bought for you behind the scene.<p>On the topic of transportation, the official app for the Swiss transports (SBB CFF FFS) is also a joy to use: input your start and destination and you have your minute-by-minute travel plan with changes. It&#x27;s fast, precis and tells you about alternative and delays if needed.<p>It sounds like a marketing post but I just realized how grateful I am to have to travel around. (I have no car)
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sincarneover 3 years ago
My Withings Steel HR. It is just enough smart watch for me. Fitness tracking is good, sleep tracking is okay, app works better than the FitBit app, and has better Apple Health integration. Battery lasts weeks. And I think it looks pretty nice. I think it fits into the category of “calm technology”, which is tough to do for a device that has notifications as part of the core functionality.
vort3over 3 years ago
Call me old, but Total Commander.<p>So much functionality and extensibility in a pretty small software, it almost didn&#x27;t change in years, and still does its job very efficiently, and my favourite part is that you can literally do every possible action with just a keyboard.<p>I love software that doesn&#x27;t require a mouse. Terminal emulators and shells are obviously things I love using (hello vim users), but Total Commander is probably the only GUI software I respect because I could do just fine if my mouse got broken.<p>---<p>Also, Keypirinha + Everything search. Both of those individually are great and do their job well, but the fact that you can combine them makes them even better. Oh, and Total Commander also can use Everything search.
jacquesmover 3 years ago
Most handtools. Estwing hammer, some pliers that probably go back to the 50&#x27;s, chisels, planes, saws etc. You can use them all day long, every day and they &#x27;just work&#x27;, hardly require maintenance and will most likely outlast me.
bschwindHNover 3 years ago
The 1zpresso J-Max coffee grinder - beautifully engineered, very clicky and satisfying to use, and creates great coffee grounds.<p>Airpods Pro - Again, the physical design and &quot;sound&quot; interactions when placing the buds in the case, closing it, opening, etc. all give a sense of satisfaction. The noise cancelling is great, and it&#x27;s not fussy like other bluetooth earbuds.<p>Pilot Frixion pens - I played with erasable pens when I was kid and they always kinda sucked. The Frixion pens behave how I would imagine an ideal erasable pen would. Great for designing things on paper, especially the multi-color pens.<p>3M Command Strips - They hold shit on the wall and they&#x27;re super easy to apply.
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colordropsover 3 years ago
I bought a Breville Barista Express when everyone started working from home. It&#x27;s one of the best product investments I&#x27;ve ever made. It&#x27;s beautifully designed, reliable, and makes amazing coffee. Has a steamer and grinder included. And I probably paid it off in all the coffee I didn&#x27;t buy from coffee shops.<p>Second would be the Tesla Model 3.
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tejohnsoover 3 years ago
Maybe I&#x27;m too easy to please, but every day since I unboxed my Kobo Forma I&#x27;ve been impressed with it. The backlight is adjustable down to barely noticeable for night reading with the lights off, and in bright light the e-ink looks great. The weight in the &quot;spine&quot; is perfect, and the rest of the unit feels near weightless. The battery lasts weeks. And the device has performed flawlessly for over a year now, which is honestly more than I expected for a somewhat niche electronics product. I use it for queued blog posts via Pocket, or some light fiction before bed or during lunch break.
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jordanpgover 3 years ago
Brother HL-2070N black and white laser printer. 14 years and still going strong.
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tomjen3over 3 years ago
The remote feature of VS Code. It is so good that I completely forgot I was on a remote machine and was pissed it had crashed - until I realized that my internet was down.<p>It is even so good that if you start something that listens to a TCP port, VS Code will just forward it for you.<p>VS Code itself is still not nearly at the level of things like IntelliJ.
azeirahover 3 years ago
Forks are great! I&#x27;ve literally never had a problem with any of my forks
muziqover 3 years ago
A 2011 era 27” iMac, that never booted to OSX, instead was installed from new with Windows.. Sheer, and unexpectedly, pure blissful experience..
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new_guyover 3 years ago
A Fanta bottle ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;i.imgur.com&#x2F;TVZBewX.jpg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;i.imgur.com&#x2F;TVZBewX.jpg</a> )<p>The shape makes it really easy to hold compared to other soda bottles.
quercusaover 3 years ago
Estwing Nail Puller: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.estwing.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;estwing-nail-puller" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.estwing.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;estwing-nail-puller</a> Perfectly designed for the task and good-looking too.
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LeoPantheraover 3 years ago
The original iPod, the very first one with the wheel that actually turned.<p>I don&#x27;t think I&#x27;ve ever known a product I loved more. I got so much pleasure from it that it made me want to learn more about product design.<p>I thought the later static touch-wheel wasn&#x27;t as good, and firewire was such a great way to load it with music, fast charging and super fast data transfer.<p>I&#x27;ve never been as happy with anything &quot;cloud based&quot; - something is always broken somewhere.
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couchandover 3 years ago
The Blichmann BeerGun (v1 -- I&#x27;m sure v2 is fine but it&#x27;s not the same).<p>It does exactly what it is supposed to. It&#x27;s better than the &quot;pro&quot; tools, despite being marketed to homebrewers. It always reliably fills bottles, to a consistent fill, with quick and easy pre- and post-purge with CO2.<p>Moreover, the engineering is beautiful. Every part has a purpose. Everything that could be a stock part is. Each custom part is machined as simply as can be.<p>Just a joy to use.
WorldPeasover 3 years ago
God i love my pebble so much, oldest piece of tech I&#x27;ve kept, but the most reliable. Good if you can get your hands on one but I have a feeling they&#x27;re going the way of the radiant cobtrol toaster in that their prices are set to go up
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freetinkerover 3 years ago
Actual physical books.
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Aeolunover 3 years ago
I’m a great fan of my reMarkable 2.<p>I’m also a great fan of my (Japanese) unit bathroom control panels. I can set the shower and bath temperature to a specific number, automatically fill my bath to a specified level with the press of a button, have it keep the bath at temperature, let me know when it’s full when I’m in the living room.<p>It’s glorious. Every time I’m staying anywhere overseas I cannot believe I’m back to fiddling with a hot and cold tap again.
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dmoyover 3 years ago
This is a cop-out answer, but:<p>EvapoRust<p>It&#x27;s not a &quot;thing&quot; that was &quot;designed&quot;, insofar as it really is just a specific chemical solvent.<p>But god damn it&#x27;s some black magic stuff.
ronyfadelover 3 years ago
It&#x27;s amazing to see the Aeropress being mentioned so many times (11 so far), compared with the Kindle (8 times), iPhone (22 times), iPod (12 times).
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bryanrasmussenover 3 years ago
I just got a new pram, the Baby Jogger city elite (sort of a cross between a stroller and a pram but I call it a pram), as a general rule I find prams badly designed and this does have some things that I think could be improved, but two things are really superior on it: the locking mechanism, and the folding mechanism.<p>The Locking mechanism is the less impressive but still useful, most locks on a pram are done by the foot and you have to push down on a bar or some other lock near the wheels and then when you want to start you need to kick up on them. Fair enough, although obviously now you are putting your locking mechanism near the area most likely to get dirt and rocks in to wear it down, and other potential ways it can be damaged.<p>Furthermore since you are using your foot to lock and unlock it can be something of a hassle because let&#x27;s admit it, most people are not very good at manipulating things with their feet.<p>The city elite locker is by the handle, you can pull it up to lock, pull down to unlock. That&#x27;s nice. You can easily see if it is locked, because it&#x27;s at hand level not down at foot level, you use it with the part of your body most people use for manipulating objects - the hand - and finally it is unlikely to be damaged because you ran over some big rock.<p>The folding mechanism is the impressive part, in the middle of the seat is a thick strap with some instructions on - I think it says &#x27;Pull up to fold&#x27; but I&#x27;d have to go down to check the exact wording. When you pull up by this strap magnets on the sidebars of the pram are released somehow and the pram folds in half automatically.<p>Yesterday I had to take a taxi with it, when the taxi driver saw this action his eyes bugged out and he laughed and said &quot;now that&#x27;s smart&quot; (in Danish though) he commented on how he had a lady the day before who could not figure out how to close her pram and mine was so easy. Indeed some of our previous prams have been so irritating to fold that my wife generally left it up to me to do. It is equally easy to unfold.<p>Everything has a downside, and this ease of folding means that sometimes you can be doing something with the pram and accidentally start the folding process, but because it is easy to unfold you can stop it as you feel it starting and put it back right. Believe me, this sounds more irritating and problematic than it actually is but I figured I should note it anyway.
dkobiaover 3 years ago
Dyson vacuum products are pretty damn impressive. I have an 9 year old Dyson DC33 and every time I take it apart to clean it, I can’t believe how thoughtful the engineers were. Repairability is 9&#x2F;10 and built like a tank.
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3flpover 3 years ago
The BMW G650GS was the best bike I&#x27;ve had. Almost zero maintenance. Reliable. Amazing fuel economy. Decent on road when sat down. No probs doing 600km days. Decent off-when road standing up. It could handle deep sand when fitted with good tires. Not very sexy looking, but the perfect jack of all trades. And, yes, master of none - which is why BMW could not market it much further, I think. Pity.
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scotty79over 3 years ago
Macromedia Fireworks. UI was better than any other graphics program I tried, ever.
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garfieldnateover 3 years ago
My Casio GW-9600 electronic dictionary [1] was an amazing help in learning Japanese. It&#x27;s perfectly optimized for quick word lookup: it boots from sleep instantly, the definitions are previewed as you type words, it has a full physical keyboard, and the screen is large but low-power so it rarely ever runs out of battery. The metal frame also makes it durable to falls on cement, etc. The content was, of course, also huge, almost guaranteeing that every word I searched for would be there. Well worth the money. I&#x27;m sad that the newer models became much slower; when you have to look up hundreds of words a day, there&#x27;s a big difference between 5 seconds and .5 seconds.<p>My favorite dictionary app is a Thai one from word-in-the-hand and Paiboon [2]. The dictionary data is quite extensive, and includes linked categories like &quot;food&quot;, &quot;pronoun&quot;, &quot;geography&quot;, &quot;counter&quot;, etc. Tapping on the category tags takes you to other words of the same category (great for studying, say, restaurant vocab) and also to articles that teach you Thai via phrases and cultural info, and to grammatical explanations for, e.g. counters or prepositions. On top of all that, it supports several romanization schemes and includes baked-in information to help you learn to read the Thai orthography. It&#x27;s a fantastic combination of extensive dictionary with good information for learners. Plus it has a (limited) export feature, which is something that Ex-Word never supported (except for if you bought special hardware to export to).<p>[1] <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;gakuran.com&#x2F;casio-ex-word-xd-gw9600&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;gakuran.com&#x2F;casio-ex-word-xd-gw9600&#x2F;</a> [2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;word-in-the-hand.com&#x2F;thai-dictionary&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;word-in-the-hand.com&#x2F;thai-dictionary&#x2F;</a>
jasonvorheover 3 years ago
Google Inbox: The perfect modern frontend for mail. RIP.<p>Sonos Playbar (got the Arc for free, sold the Playbar): Perfect sound, a timeless design, software was dope around 2015-2016. All downhill from there, when Sonos decided to pivot to supporting Alexa&#x2F;Google Assistant and attempting to become smarter.<p>Google Pixelbook: Super thin, light weight, super clean Linux system with first class support for Progressive Web Apps, Android and Linux apps. Chrome OS features the simplest software update process I&#x27;ve seen in action so far. The design is unique, the keyboard was perfect when right when Apple decided to ship shitty butterfly keyboards. 7 years of software updates.<p>Rancilio Silvia: Budget Espresso maker that&#x27;s close to indestructible. Everything can be serviced, replaced, upgraded, there&#x27;s no shortage of replacement parts, the Espresso is great once you know how to use it.<p>Aeropress: Simple to use, fits well into almost all travel luggage, and produces great coffee with little effort.
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jet_32951over 3 years ago
HP41C, s&#x2F;n 2018A00505. Had it since the early 1980s, still works. PPC ROM still works.
samsolomonover 3 years ago
I’m not sure about the best designed things ever, but here are some purchases in the last year, that I’ve really appreciated:<p>Corona 10-inch Pruning Saw<p>I had been using an old pair of loppers to trim most of the low hanging branches in my yard. This pruning saw is so much easier. It can cut through a 4-inch branch like nothing. Also it folds up so there’s no need for a sheath.<p>EGO 650 CFM Blower<p>Electric lawn tools are amazing. No dealing with fuel and oil. Plus they are so much quieter. This blower has been a life saver this fall. Planning to purchase an ego mower soon.<p>Leatherman Skeletool CX<p>The skeletool has replaced my pocket knife on camping trips. It’s not like most leatherman tools with 100 functions. The skeletool has about 7, but pocket knife, pliers and bottle opener cover most of my needs.<p>Outdoor Voices Sunday Short<p>Bar none my favorite pair of athletic shorts. Extremely flexible, comfortable and they look pretty good. I can wear them working out, lounging around the house or out to run errands. I probably own 6 pairs.
Dowwieover 3 years ago
I think the aeropress coffee press was very well designed. It&#x27;s made of three sturdy, plastic parts that wash easily and last a very long time. It makes a great cup of coffee. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aeropress.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aeropress.com&#x2F;</a><p>I&#x27;m also impressed by the MSR whisperlite international camp stove. The international edition is designed to work with a variety of fuel types-- white gas, kerosene, etc. The stove compacts down to a very small size. It produces a jet sufficient for boiling a pot of water in less than 10 minutes. It can be easily maintained and there is a market for parts. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.msrgear.com&#x2F;stoves&#x2F;liquid-fuel-stoves&#x2F;whisperlite-international-stove&#x2F;06633.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.msrgear.com&#x2F;stoves&#x2F;liquid-fuel-stoves&#x2F;whisperlit...</a>
contingenciesover 3 years ago
<i>Bicycles</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Bicycles" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Bicycles</a><p><i>Chinese knives</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Kitchen_knife#Chinese_chef.27s_knife" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Kitchen_knife#Chinese_chef.27s...</a><p><i>Chopsticks</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Chopsticks" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Chopsticks</a><p><i>CPUs</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Central_processing_unit" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Central_processing_unit</a><p><i>Fiber lasers</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Fiber_laser" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Fiber_laser</a><p><i>IP</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Internet_Protocol" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Internet_Protocol</a><p><i>Mail</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Mail" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Mail</a><p><i>Trimarans</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Trimaran" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Trimaran</a><p><i>Unix</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Unix" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Unix</a><p>PS. This is a very interesting question. Although I suspect the OP was looking for products and UI&#x2F;UX, I think higher-level categories are more objective and timeless bastions of design excellence.<p>PPS. Note these which stand out to me fall roughly in to two categories: those which harness physics, and those which avoid or abstract it.
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jamesdhuttonover 3 years ago
Bit of a random one but I give kudos to the winged corkscrew. That&#x27;s the type that has two levers on each side, which you push down to raise the cork. Wikipedia tells me it was invented by one Domenick Rosati and patented in 1930. Why do I like it? Makes pulling a cork easy, and the design is simple and elegant.
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effdeeover 3 years ago
Lego is pretty high on my list: it&#x27;s all about composition with reuseable components that have just the right size. Also, the basic interface is stable since 1958.
rvbaover 3 years ago
Those faucets that allow you to control three things (amount of water, amount of hot water, amount of cold water) using a single joint (random picture from imgur <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.imgur.com&#x2F;G3Yydd9" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.imgur.com&#x2F;G3Yydd9</a> ). People use taps&#x2F;faucets with 2 knobs in 2021??? Wtf.<p>European style windows ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;videos&#x2F;comments&#x2F;4kjsnp&#x2F;european_windows_are_awesome&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;videos&#x2F;comments&#x2F;4kjsnp&#x2F;european_win...</a> )<p>Excel (before latest reskin which made it less productive because there is less space for user)<p>Pivot tables<p>I could probably list few mobile phones. Each were good for their time (nokia 3310, nokia e52, samsung galaxy s2).<p>Nintendo entertainment system (put the game and play...).
porknubbinsover 3 years ago
Japanese sportsbikes are some of the best designed and engineered things I’ve used. Some designs haven’t even really evolved that much since the 80s as they were already pretty much the apotheosis of a high performance two wheeled vehicle . Tires, suspensions and brake designs have improved due to (i guess) materials science and manufacturing more than even design. Plenty of engines are used in models for decades because they were so good and overengineered. Aside from the engineering side of excellent performance and reliability the UI is very intuitive, and especially on Honda the ergonomics are near perfect to the point of disappearing out from under you. Of course same could be said of some cars but the design space is so huge its harder to nail down an ideal car.
thomover 3 years ago
I loved my TiVo, almost everything about the end to end experience was flawless. Just recalling the ‘be-bip’ sound of interacting with the UI still brings me joy. The interface was as simple as you could ever hope for (and structurally similar to the navigation in iOS). Up, down, left, right, pause, rewind, fast forward, thumbs up and down. Everything was built on simple consistent primitives and everything felt immediate, in a way no TV has to me in more than a decade. Even the control felt nicer in your hand than the usual slab of plastic. Coming home to new episodes of Star Trek it had kindly decided to record always gave me a warm feeling that this smart little box was on my side. Too many devices feel like a fight against something utterly soulless these days.
hackertuxover 3 years ago
- Palmer Monicon passive monitor controller<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.palmer-germany.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;products&#x2F;studio-monitors-and-monitor-controllers&#x2F;5193&#x2F;monicon" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.palmer-germany.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;products&#x2F;studio-monitors-a...</a><p>- Olight Javelot Turbo<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;olightworld.com&#x2F;olight-javelot-turbo" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;olightworld.com&#x2F;olight-javelot-turbo</a><p>- Dirt cheap backpack with a Puma logo, extremely light and virtually indestructible.<p>- Honourable mentions: Seasonic PSU, Fuji X100F and a Casio SL-807A solar powered pocket calculator.<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.calcuseum.com&#x2F;SCRAPBOOK&#x2F;BONUS&#x2F;63572&#x2F;1.htm" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.calcuseum.com&#x2F;SCRAPBOOK&#x2F;BONUS&#x2F;63572&#x2F;1.htm</a>
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corinroyalover 3 years ago
Redwing boots with a steel shank and toe cap. Totally indestructable, classic styling. Once broken in they conform to your foot shape to provide amazing support, comfort, and protection from puncture or crushing. They are American made, and the town is gorgeous.
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JensRantilover 3 years ago
Old-school microwave ovens; one knob for effect, one knob for timer (which implicitly starts the microwave), and one button the open the door (which implicitly stops the microwave).<p>Today&#x27;s modern microwaves ovens have _horrible_ UX. I talked to someone a few years ago who&#x27;d worked at an oven manufacturer and told me that UX people aren&#x27;t involved in designing these ovens anymore; the process is entirely driven by marketing departments requiring more buttons, weird sliders, digital UIs and other ridiculous features - all to increase sales and convince people they need a new microwave when 99% of people really don&#x27;t.
mbrodersenover 3 years ago
Kinesis Advantage2 keyboard. Without it I would not be able to work as a software developer.
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timwaaghover 3 years ago
Outerknown Pacifica jacket. It&#x27;s not often you see extraordinary looking fashion from the land of the stars and Stripes. Mostly I wear European brands. I remember falling in love with it and buying like the last one. Too bad that other than its amazing design it has little going for it. There were a bunch of loose threads on mine and it felt kind of itchy. But I still have it and when I wear it it often gets noticed. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gearpatrol.com&#x2F;style&#x2F;a505232&#x2F;outerknown-fall-2018-jackets&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gearpatrol.com&#x2F;style&#x2F;a505232&#x2F;outerknown-fall-201...</a>
fri_schover 3 years ago
&gt; I&#x27;ll go first. I think the Bialetti Brikka is exceptional: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Bialetti-Stovetop-Producing-Crema-Ric" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Bialetti-Stovetop-Producing-Crema-Ric</a>...<p>Sorry for the shameless plug but I have a problem with the Bialetti Brikka. I think it&#x27;s great, but recently I did a full cleaning of all parts and since then it stopped working. Each time when the coffee is starting to boil up it spurts out of the hole in the lid and makes a huge mess. I checked everything but didn&#x27;t find anything that might be causing this. Any ideas how to fix it? Thanks!
tamadeover 3 years ago
HP 12C. The best RPN calculator ever created. Mine is over 20 years old and still going strong. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;HP-12C" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;HP-12C</a>
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tjalfiover 3 years ago
The Nack Pro utility knife[0][1] is a great tool; it&#x27;s easy to operate one-handed and is virtually indestructible. The handle contains 30 blades in a rotating magazine; you change blades by rotating the base of the handle. I bought one in the early 2000s and it will probably last me the rest of my life.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;toolmonger.com&#x2F;2008&#x2F;12&#x2F;08&#x2F;utility-knife-revolver&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;toolmonger.com&#x2F;2008&#x2F;12&#x2F;08&#x2F;utility-knife-revolver&#x2F;</a><p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ebay.com&#x2F;itm&#x2F;324381893450" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ebay.com&#x2F;itm&#x2F;324381893450</a>
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erezshover 3 years ago
&quot;Ever&quot; is a tough one but ..<p>Python is still the best-designed language I ever used, warts and all. It&#x27;s often grouped with Javascript because they&#x27;re both interpreted and &quot;duck-typed&quot;, but imho the gap between them is huge.<p>Svelte is amazing for UI logic. It makes hard things feel easy and simple, and really hard things to feel possible.<p>QBasic was a horrible language, but its IDE (if you can call it that) was incredibly helpful for beginners. Maybe I&#x27;m nostalgic, but I never experienced such helpful hand-holding in programming ever since.<p>Sorry it&#x27;s all about programming. Most real world design is either too trivial or too impossible to make an impression.
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GrinningFoolover 3 years ago
My dryer door. It opens both horizontally (easy to take things out) and vertically (eaay to put things in). And it does so in a totally natural way, based on where you naturally grab it when you&#x27;re coming into to load or unload it.
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elliekellyover 3 years ago
I’m not really the type to fuss over wine glasses but I was gifted a set of Veuve Cliquot champagne flutes (similar to the glasses that come in this set[1]) and they really are beautiful. The shape of the glass makes the bubbles fizz to the top in this tiny perfect spiral in the center of the glass. You can tell they were designed by someone who cares about champagne and pays attention to its presentation.<p>[1]<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.champagneking.co.uk&#x2F;product&#x2F;3904&#x2F;veuve-clicquot-ponsardin-glass-set" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.champagneking.co.uk&#x2F;product&#x2F;3904&#x2F;veuve-clicquot-...</a>
spodekover 3 years ago
The bicycle wheel. I can&#x27;t believe 16 hours and nobody mentioned it (that I found anyway). You will find few things that serve their functions so well with such a minimum of material.<p>The General Public License. The foundation of Linux, Wikipedia, and more. Every company and government agency that took it on lost. It uses the rules it wants to subvert to subvert them.<p>The United States Constitution. So far it has withstood onslaughts and survived. We may be seeing the end of it, but people have said that before. It&#x27;s inspired many others. The United States may be young, as cultures go, but our Constitution is, I believe, the oldest.
wallflow3rover 3 years ago
Goruck backpacks. They remain unbelievably comfortable with heavy loads, last forever and the clamshell design makes them easy to pack and more importantly find your stuff. The only backpacks I will buy anymore.<p>I&#x27;ve been using the gr1 26L for work, grocery shopping and travelling for 5 years. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.goruck.com&#x2F;collections&#x2F;gr1" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.goruck.com&#x2F;collections&#x2F;gr1</a><p>The gr2 and gr3 are excellent travel bags when you need something bigger. Only backpacks of that size that I have found comfortable to carry with just shoulder straps.
eloisiusover 3 years ago
The EasyCard (悠遊卡) in Taiwan. It’s an IC card frequently added onto just about every other card, like bank cards, student ID, or you can just buy one at the convenience store. You can store value on it, use it to ride metro, trains, busses, ferries, rent a share bike, buy groceries, anything at convenience stores, pay for food at lots of places, badge into buildings, and I keep learning more things I can do with it. The card, of course, is just a card, but the network and the number of things you can use it for is amazing.
bookofjoeover 3 years ago
iPod touch: for $200 you get an extra screen that looks great on a device that&#x27;s almost ethereally thin.<p>RayBan Stories glasses: for $299 you get functional wearable normal-appearing glasses that take pictures and make 30-second movies. Wonderfully easy to set up and use.<p>Ultra Heavy-duty Scotch tape dispenser: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Scotch-Invisible-Photo-Safe-Engineered-Repairing&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B0006HVKOC&#x2F;ref=sr_1_8?keywords=scotch+tape+dispenser&amp;qid=1637984699&amp;qsid=141-4802030-8440043&amp;sr=8-8&amp;sres=B000Y52D5G%2CB0147GB7CC%2CB07Y613GMP%2CB0006HVKOC%2CB0006HVL8C%2CB07BW44HKM%2CB0002LCRMG%2CB082LX4D8H%2CB077Z992SW%2CB082LW23F3%2CB07CB6F1BB%2CB002U3VABI%2CB07YNHMM7R%2CB002VPDKT0%2CB002ZZ5DLO%2CB00P12N4Z0%2CB01FC8HYQC%2CB000093L55%2CB01LYWPFEK%2CB004LQMXL8" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Scotch-Invisible-Photo-Safe-Engineere...</a><p>Giant Foot doorstop — works with doors with up to 2&quot; clearance: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Giant-Foot-Heavy-Clearance-Yellow&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B00007JQPH&#x2F;ref=sr_1_1_sspa?keywords=giant+foot+door+stop&amp;qid=1637984897&amp;sr=8-1-spons&amp;psc=1&amp;spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzSzlJQzdIWkFGT0pKJmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwNDE2ODE1N0MyTjhBNFUyT0pKJmVuY3J5cHRlZEFkSWQ9QTAwNjM0MzExUkdEWjE1MTRDTksxJndpZGdldE5hbWU9c3BfYXRmJmFjdGlvbj1jbGlja1JlZGlyZWN0JmRvTm90TG9nQ2xpY2s9dHJ1ZQ==" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Giant-Foot-Heavy-Clearance-Yellow&#x2F;dp&#x2F;...</a>
mitchbobover 3 years ago
For working on bicycles, my favorite tool by far is the DT Swiss Spokey Pro spoke wrench [1]. Beautiful, ergonomic, pricey, and worth every penny. It completely transformed my attitude toward wheel building and truing. There are very few activities I do that are more meditative and satisfying than putting together a great wheel.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.jensonusa.com&#x2F;DT-Swiss-Spokey-Pro-Nipple-Wrench" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.jensonusa.com&#x2F;DT-Swiss-Spokey-Pro-Nipple-Wrench</a>
elihuover 3 years ago
Pilot 402 stapler. Peavey T-60 electric guitar (especially the knobs -- Peavey is the only guitar company that really nailed good knob design). The Haskell language (not because it&#x27;s perfect, but because it demonstrated what was possible). Rust as well, for the same reason. The modern steel-frame piano. The 1981 Mazda GLC. Suzuki Omnichord. The Moog 960 sequencer (which I&#x27;ve used in the form of its Behringer re-implementation for eurorack modular).
joeyjojoover 3 years ago
Synthstrom Deluge. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;synthstrom.com&#x2F;product&#x2F;deluge&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;synthstrom.com&#x2F;product&#x2F;deluge&#x2F;</a><p>I had an OP-1 for a number of years but I could never progress beyond 2-4 bar loops. When I bought my Deluge I made a full track in my first two hours with it, and I was pretty proud of it. I own a number of groove boxes now, but have only ever managed to completed tracks on my Deluge.
sound1over 3 years ago
Fujifilm Mirrorless Cameras (mine is 2nd gen XE2). First ever interchangeable camera I carry with me to all my family trips. Excellent build quality, physical controls, high quality lens options and not to mention insanely great jpegs straight out of the camera. I have taken so many wonderful pictures and captured so many precious moments of my family and kid, it is easily the best purchase I made by a long shot.
hktover 3 years ago
I lived in a brutalist concrete block and the interior, fixtures and general way of life (big communal garden, waste disposal rather than weekly bin collections, community spaces in the building etc) were far superior to anything I&#x27;ve ever experienced.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.m.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Park_Hill,_Sheffield" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.m.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Park_Hill,_Sheffield</a>
ironman1478over 3 years ago
This mechanical pencil <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;uniballco.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;kuru-toga-elite-mechanical-pencils" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;uniballco.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;kuru-toga-elite-mechanical-pe...</a> It just feels so good to write with and it just doesn&#x27;t break. I&#x27;ve used so many mechanical pencils and some feel better, but they have quality issues. This pencil just works.
t8e56vd4ihover 3 years ago
The VapCap fromm DynaVap for vaping weed. I use a Ti-Woodie Cocobolo for several years now. it&#x27;s very robust, very simple, easy to maintain and clean and hands down the best vaporizer for small doses, absolutely efficient. I use about 0.02g for a session. That wouldn&#x27;t be possible with almost any other vaporizer without. and you get everything out of the weed. also it&#x27;s reasonably priced.
baalimagoover 3 years ago
The osthyvel: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Cheese_knife#Cheese_slicer" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Cheese_knife#Cheese_slicer</a><p>Creates slices of cheese. Very cheap, very efficient at what it&#x27;s supposed to do, and the more you use it the better it gets (it gets slightly more bent = more cheese per slice).<p>Buy one for 2€, use it every day for 10 years.
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SteveNutsover 3 years ago
My Technivorm Moccamaster coffee maker
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timonokoover 3 years ago
I like the wick-based kerosene stove the Chinese have recently invented. Pressure-based kerosene stoves can be really difficult with some old fuel you got from rusty barrel in Eskimo village. And they are dangerous too.<p>Wick-based works like a lamp, but with 8 wick. Very clever burning chamber makes it burn with blue flame. Probably works equally well with any kind of oil, example diesel.
lowkeyover 3 years ago
Tonal &lt;www.tonal.com&gt; is amazing. It is the fitness system of my dreams. A resistance training setup with digital weights that hangs on the wall. It is filled with high quality content that showcases how to take full advantage of the tech. An ai combined with a well designed adjustment system and suddenly weight training is so fun and fluid I can do it every day.
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staindkover 3 years ago
I think my keyboard [1 - pic][2 - site] is almost perfect. It is not full-sized but I don&#x27;t have to compromise on features etc., as with a simple Num Lock toggle I can move between having a numpad and having access to arrow keys and the &#x27;home row&#x27;.<p>My singular gripe is the fact that I can&#x27;t assign macros to any of the numpad keys - &quot;Num 1&quot; and &quot;Num 3&quot; do literally nothing when Num Lock is off which is a bit of a waste. Was hopeful that a firmware update would come along to help with this but AFAIK none has.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;cdn.coolermaster.com&#x2F;media&#x2F;assets&#x2F;1017&#x2F;masterkeys-pro-m-white-gallery-3-zoom.png" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;cdn.coolermaster.com&#x2F;media&#x2F;assets&#x2F;1017&#x2F;masterkeys-pr...</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.coolermaster.com&#x2F;catalog&#x2F;peripheral&#x2F;keyboards&#x2F;masterkeys-pro-m-white" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.coolermaster.com&#x2F;catalog&#x2F;peripheral&#x2F;keyboards&#x2F;ma...</a>
Grimm665over 3 years ago
K2 Cinch bindings. If you snowboard with skiers, who are constantly complaining about the time it takes to do up your bindings after getting off the lift, these things are awesome.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;k2snow.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;p&#x2F;k2-cinch-tc-snowboard-binding" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;k2snow.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;p&#x2F;k2-cinch-tc-snowboard-binding</a>
jerome-jhover 3 years ago
I liked the HVAC controls of my 2005 Honda CR-V. Three big knobs: fan control, temperature, direction&#x2F;mode. The temperature knob had one notch per °C. Simple and robust. All three were a pleasure to use even after 15 years, usually while keeping the eyes on the road. Oh and the vertical hand brake freed a lot of room between the front seats. No car is perfect of course. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;duckduckgo.com&#x2F;?q=honda+cr-v+2005+dash&amp;t=ffab&amp;iar=images&amp;iax=images&amp;ia=images" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;duckduckgo.com&#x2F;?q=honda+cr-v+2005+dash&amp;t=ffab&amp;iar=im...</a><p>Wifi router WNR3500L with DD-WRT. True eventless running for 10 years. Cannot tell the same of my current setup. On PC the Debian GNU Linux distrib is pretty good for peace of mind.<p>I like Vim for its modal interface with old-school menus as a fallback and mplayer for its complete command line and keyboard controllability, and its effective OSD.
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Causality1over 3 years ago
The Leatherman MUT. I&#x27;ve carried it clipped to my pocket every day for ten years now and it&#x27;s still going strong. Carrying six two-ended driver bits, replaceable blades, and a hammer end has covered such an enormous percentage of my use cases it&#x27;s unreal. Having a steel poking stick on you at all times is surprisingly useful.
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Eric_WVGGover 3 years ago
I’m not a knife fetishist or anything, but a weird number of my favorite household items are edged things.<p>I grabbed a Global 12” chef’s knife after reading about it in Kitchen Confidential twenty-ish years ago, reminded of its superiority whenever I’m in a friend’s kitchen. I am sad to admit that IKEA makes a very decent clone, though.<p>An old nemesis gave me a Benchmade serrated knife with this miraculous spring-button release, absolute joy to handle.<p>I used to tie fishing flies in Montana as a kid; fly-tying scissors are fantastically sharp and useful for all kinds of micro projects. I often use them for extracting slivers that tweezers can’t reach. For macro work, nothing beats a pair of sewing shears; get a decent set and you’ll never touch a standard office or school scissor ever again.<p>Oxo scissors for the kitchen, though — the blades comes apart so you can clean the space between the hinge, lotta gross stuff will build up there in the kitchen.
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jfrdover 3 years ago
The Kershaw Leek pocket knife. Flips open one-handed and makes a satisfying “snick”. I’ve used mine daily for 5 years.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B0009VC9YK&#x2F;ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_0SYMZ4F2VPAVZB3PRANY" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B0009VC9YK&#x2F;ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_...</a>
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desioover 3 years ago
- WD40 - Duct Tape - zip ties - Pilot&#x27;s &quot;Better Retractable&quot; ballpoint pen - Rhodia reverse book dot book note pad - Thinkpad x220, x230, and x250 - MacBook pro 2015 - Nokia 5110 and 3310 - Henckels Professional Chef knife - Emacs Orgmode - Microsoft Paint - Microsoft Excel - Lego - ipod shuffle 4
jansanover 3 years ago
- Casio A168WG-YES as a watch that became part of my body<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.casio-europe.com&#x2F;de&#x2F;produkte&#x2F;uhren&#x2F;vintage&#x2F;a168wa-1yes&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.casio-europe.com&#x2F;de&#x2F;produkte&#x2F;uhren&#x2F;vintage&#x2F;a168w...</a><p>- Zwilling Professional S Universal Knife 13 cm - For the daily joy of cutting fresh &quot;Brötchen&quot;<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.zwilling-messer.de&#x2F;Zwilling-Professional-S-Universalmesser-13-cm" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.zwilling-messer.de&#x2F;Zwilling-Professional-S-Unive...</a><p>- Nintendo Labo series - Child toys made from cardboard for the Nintendo switch with an incredible level of perfection on so many levels<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nintendo.de&#x2F;Nintendo-Labo&#x2F;Nintendo-Labo-1328637.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nintendo.de&#x2F;Nintendo-Labo&#x2F;Nintendo-Labo-1328637....</a>
Diesel555over 3 years ago
My most useful watch for daily life and my job (pilot) has been a Citizen Navihawk JY8035.<p>I have many styles between the Apple Watch and a Garmin Fenix to a 5$ Casio. The functionality is amazing both day and night.<p>Features I wanted:<p>Automatic time updates to the second<p>Analog face<p>Digital second readout<p>Solar<p>Visible at night<p>Secondary time without any button presses (I use UTC)<p>I list it because it is the best designed watch I’ve used. I’d use it over a breitling any day for functionality. However I would gladly give up one of those circular dials for a date readout. It takes one rotation to switch between the secondary time and the date currently.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Citizen-Eco-Drive-Navihawk-Timekeeping-JY8035-04E&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B00DBUVKP0&#x2F;ref=mp_s_a_1_5?crid=28F3ONPFGIEYB&amp;keywords=jy8037&amp;qid=1637976881&amp;sprefix=jy8037%2Caps%2C176&amp;sr=8-5" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;Citizen-Eco-Drive-Navihawk-Timekeepin...</a> (Deal of the day..)
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wly_cdgrover 3 years ago
You said things, so I am excluding software (like the original version of the Square web app)<p>JVC Flats<p>GBA SP (the pocket clamshell one)<p>Retro microwave with the original-ipod style single knob controls<p>More generically, forks<p>Grand Prize Winner: wood Staunton chess set - beautiful, durable, affordable, practical. The piece design is exquisitely balanced between representation and abstraction
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i_am_proteusover 3 years ago
W123 Mercedes-Benz sedan with an OM617A motor - the classic &quot;300D Turbodiesel&quot; from the early 1980s.
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ruslanover 3 years ago
Atari 130XE - manufactured in 1986, works till this day (with some SIO mod), brings joy to me and to my kids.
mattgreenrocksover 3 years ago
Sennheiser HD600 headphones: gorgeous sound that is very detail oriented without being clinical.<p>Fractal Audio FM3: guitar amp+FX modeling done incredibly well. Guitar is now a fully addictive hobby for me.<p>Fish shell: I use it 8 hours a day and have very few complaints. Performant, ergonomic, and thoughtfully maintained.
phlover 3 years ago
Funny, I just used my Brikka coincidentally 5 min before reading this post. I think you are right. It&#x27;s such a simple design and creates better espresso than most of the expensive machines that people use at home usually. Roughly made of 6 replaceable parts, backwards compatible with other Bialettis, no plastic capsule waste and easy to use.<p>Last year I picked up a HP Jornada 720 from Ebay out of curiosity. Considering its from the year 2000 it&#x27;s impressive how much it can do. The build quality is sturdy, the keyboard is amazing and the OS feels more snappy than most of my current setups. I wish they would do a reboot with better screen and wifi. I&#x27;m not sure if it&#x27;s &quot;the best-designed&quot; thing I have ever used, but it impressed me.
GhettoComputersover 3 years ago
Almost android device once they became more powerful and had root, around after 2016 is when only root matters.<p>Full Linux CLI, all the game systems of the 90s playable, all the hardware devices of the 90s emulated but much better (the Pokédex app was very good, TI emulator, etc), OTG docking for wired devices or you can use BT for hardware. They can do 90% of what your current phone can do but everything is a bit slower and worst, so using it as a dedicated device for various purposes like a Linux man page app at your computer, a device to game on, attach a controller, spares your non easily replaceable battery, if you have an iPhone and didn’t jailbreak, having a handheld Linux computer in your pocket is convenient to easily use CLI tools and SSH&#x2F;MOSH.
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kleopullinover 3 years ago
Zeiss Axio Imager research grade upright light microscope with DIC, phase contrast, and fluorescence. It&#x27;s easy to use without training if you&#x27;ve had at least a high school or college bio course with a real microscope. It&#x27;s stable and sturdy, the lenses rotate into position with a lovely stop, the stage moves steadily, the lenses are fantastic. All the microscopy perks are there, but just the way the basics are assembled into an instrument make it a gem, from focusing the eyepieces, to focusing the image, centering the stage, aligning the beam in the optical axis, inserting prisms or filters. It reminds me of my 40 year old Husqvarna sewing machine, built solid and heavy and designed to be used with controls to be handled.
ppsover 3 years ago
Macbook Air M1 gold. I love every detail of this machine.
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bltover 3 years ago
Mastrad silicone spatula. It&#x27;s such a massive improvement over an old two-piece rubber spatula.
jackcosgroveover 3 years ago
I&#x27;m going to go a bit more low-tech than most, and say a simple wooden reamer. Nothing juices an orange better, and it&#x27;s literally something you could whittle. I don&#x27;t think the design has changed in centuries, and I don&#x27;t think it can be improved.
mhbover 3 years ago
Concept 2 rowing machine.
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junonover 3 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;buyitforlife" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;buyitforlife</a> for those of you who, like me, always want a good suggestion when I buy something I intend to keep.<p>Figured it was relevant here.
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balkotdudeover 3 years ago
Telegram. It&#x27;s fast. It&#x27;s snappy. It pushes the limits of what a messaging app can be. Every time I want to do something, I find the feature already there. And the performance of the app is consistent throughout all the platforms.
dukeofdoomover 3 years ago
These are the best products I&#x27;ve used in the last decade:<p>1. 2013 Macbook - Still us it. Though bought the new m1 today.<p>2. Pelican Kayak - Special edition for costco (has detachable bags). Probably not the best kayak. But at $300, probably the funnest thing I&#x27;ve purchase per $ spent. I&#x27;ve explored so many places with it; beautiful, sublime places filled with birds and wildlife. Super fun. 70% of the world is water.<p>3. K2 Rollerblades - Hate running, but rollerblading feels like a superpower<p>4. Delonghi Expresso machine + Oat milk.<p>5. Sony FDRx3000. Like a Gopro, but better. Though now badly needs an update.<p>6. DJI drones.<p>Best deal ever: All you can jet pass from BluJet. Flew around the world for $600 for a month. (plus some minor fees).
drakonkaover 3 years ago
A Huskee Cup. Low maintenance, made from coffee husk, great seal with the lid, and I love that it can hold hot coffee but not burn your hands due to the fins running along the body. Many local coffee shops also give me a discount on takeaway coffee if I bring my own takeaway cup, and some offer a Huskee Cup swap program where you can leave your dirty cup with them if you&#x27;ve been carrying it around after drinking your last coffee and get a clean one for your next order (personally I prefer to just keep my own though).<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;huskee.co&#x2F;huskeecup&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;huskee.co&#x2F;huskeecup&#x2F;</a>
jimmiesover 3 years ago
Zorijushi rice cooker. It can cook rice perfectly and can hold cooked rice for days.<p>Facebook portal. Yeah Facebook privacy and all that but that&#x27;s a good product that allows me to call people without having to mess with the phone. The audio and video is super clear. I use it despite it&#x27;s from Facebook.<p>Work sharp knife sharpener. It&#x27;s superior to sharpening the my knives with the stone.<p>Apple airtags. I often forget where I put my keychain so this is really well executed. Apple airpods. They just work and they are nice enough.<p>Hakko soldering station. I don&#x27;t know if the recent Chinese usbc ones are better but the hakko one I have work well enough for everything I want to do.
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ronyfadelover 3 years ago
• The Fellow Carter mug [1]<p>• Amazon Kindle PaperWhite<p>• Chrome Industries backpack [2]<p>• A.P.C. denim jeans [3]<p>• Stan Smith sneakers<p>• My Nexstand laptop stand<p>• Surprisingly, these cheap Theragun knock-offs you can get on Amazon for a fifth of the price.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fellowproducts.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;carter-everywhere-mug" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fellowproducts.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;carter-everywhere-mug</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.chromeindustries.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.chromeindustries.com&#x2F;</a><p>[3] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.apcstore.com&#x2F;petit-new-standard-iai-codbs-m09047.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.apcstore.com&#x2F;petit-new-standard-iai-codbs-m09047...</a>
ichydkrsrnaeover 3 years ago
This $14.88 pair of wireless Bluetooth headphones from Walmart&#x27;s ONN brand. You&#x27;d swear you spent $1000 on a pair of Grado cans. I don&#x27;t know why they&#x27;re so good, but they are. I bought 3 pair for backup in case the first fails. I&#x27;m convinced it&#x27;s a COVID anomaly, like upscaling because you can&#x27;t source cheaper parts, or something similarly unusual.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.walmart.com&#x2F;ip&#x2F;onn-Bluetooth-On-Ear-Headphones-Blue&#x2F;106145703" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.walmart.com&#x2F;ip&#x2F;onn-Bluetooth-On-Ear-Headphones-B...</a>
Zanniover 3 years ago
Hydro Flask pint glasses (sadly, now discontinued). The big win is that the insulation prevents condensation, which is a real annoyance in warm weather. The textured coating has a really nice feel to it, and I love the colors. Added bonus: they don&#x27;t break when you drop them. They&#x27;re twenty times the price of actual glass dollar store pint glasses, but worth it. Mine make me happy every time I use them. Sadly, they&#x27;re now discontinued, but a couple of places have some (dwindling) stock. (Hydro Flask also makes a 16oz Tumbler, which I don&#x27;t like as much.)
brailsafeover 3 years ago
I really like my Microsoft Sculpt keyboard, and my Gameboy SP. I can&#x27;t imagine ysing a different keyboard at this point. I do wish they&#x27;d properly iterate on it somehow, but it&#x27;s great.
_inqover 3 years ago
- Canon 5D classic. Fits my hand perfectly and the way colors are popping is something that i chase in photography to this day<p>- Older Intuos drawing tablets. Super sturdy, great experience to work with, and battery-less pen tech which for many years was offered only by Wacom products<p>- iPod Classic. Great interface idea with the touch circle, nice metal back.<p>- HHKB Keyboard. Something i use to this day and don&#x27;t really plan to change, even as I&#x27;m strongly into custom keyboards as a hobby. The layout is just too perfect for programming, especially if you&#x27;re used to Vim.
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cpachover 3 years ago
Thermapen
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loufeover 3 years ago
I have been blown away by how reliable and convenient my Growler is (a Stanley Classic Easy-Pour Growler 64oz). I love carbonated water and work in an underground mine, I fill that thing full every day I work and bring it down. I never lose pressure (aside obviously from when it&#x27;s opened), it stays cold seemingly indefinitely, the safety latch ensures the swinging lid hits nothing, and the thing is so solidly built it hasn&#x27;t sustained a single nick despite falling on rock, etc. I&#x27;m a happy customer.
RickJWagnerover 3 years ago
I have a John Deere riding mower where you have to raise the seat to get at the battery and other mechanical components.<p>To raise the seat, you have to swivel a tiny by stout metal latch that keeps the seat from bouncing around on it&#x27;s hinges. The metal latch is held in it&#x27;s position by gravity-- you have to use your finger to swivel it when you want the seat to move.<p>This is engineering at it&#x27;s finest. Effective, durable, efficient in it&#x27;s purpose. Timeless design as well-- I don&#x27;t think it could be improved upon.
itronitronover 3 years ago
Epson EcoTank printer. We purchased ours in 2018 and haven&#x27;t yet needed to refill the ink reservoirs (getting close though) and it comes with an extra refill set as well.
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agysover 3 years ago
The “Rex” potato peeler. A perfect piece of design: ergonomic, solid, low-cost.<p>Small fact: the lateral “blade” to cut out the eyes of the potato is obtained from the removed central part of the main blade; some newer models have it extended from the grip…<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.swissinfo.ch&#x2F;eng&#x2F;rex-the-peeler-is-king-of-the-kitchen&#x2F;5486616" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.swissinfo.ch&#x2F;eng&#x2F;rex-the-peeler-is-king-of-the-k...</a>
sam_lowry_over 3 years ago
Amazfit Bip wrist watches. Light, durable, always-on transflective display. Can be used with GadgetBridge so it does not leak your data.<p>I bought one for each family member.
Archelaosover 3 years ago
The first thing that came into my mind is the 4-colour pallpoint pen from Wedo: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wedo.de&#x2F;4_colour_ballpoint_pen_chrome" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wedo.de&#x2F;4_colour_ballpoint_pen_chrome</a><p>It is very practical if you want to use different colours for note-taking away from your desk.<p>I had my first one aprox. 40 years ago when I was a school boy. Its design hasn&#x27;t changed since.
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oblibover 3 years ago
For me it would be mostly tools I&#x27;ve used that come to mind.<p>In the random order I thought of them here are a few that stand out:<p>Miller 35s Mig Welder, Victor Cutting Torch, Mac Mini, Vise Grips, Suzuki Samurai 4x4, 1985 Toyota Pickup 4x4, LED Flashlight, Handheld compass, Handheld Garmin GPS with Maps, BBedit, Beverly Shear, Super Cat Alcohol Stove, Raspberry Pi, Lancaster Metal Shrinker&#x2F;Stretcher.
sdeframondover 3 years ago
A good old Opinel knife. Simple. Robust. Efficient.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.opinel.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.opinel.com&#x2F;</a>
Tomteover 3 years ago
A Hario teapot. It never drips from the spout, no matter how clumsily I pour the tea. No teadrop running along the outer glass wall, never.
fuzzfactorover 3 years ago
Everything from Valco Instruments, where the founder and CEO (Stan Stearns [0]) launched using his own engineering designs and continued to maintain a prototyping bench indefinitely, long after he had numerous gifted engineers employed.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.vici.com&#x2F;heritageaward2020&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.vici.com&#x2F;heritageaward2020&#x2F;</a>
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marianovover 3 years ago
Leatherman tools 5 meters of Spectra rope I&#x27;ve owned for 20 years and use for everything Thinkpad X220 Shimano bicycle drivetrains
Bradlincover 3 years ago
A few things that jump out to me: Toyota LandCruiser 100, Casper Glow Light, MacBook Air and Design With In Reach Theater Sofa.
vermadenover 3 years ago
ThinkPad laptops (W520&#x2F;T420s&#x2F;X220&#x2F;...) up to 2011 - with 7-row keyboards.<p>Also Dell Latitude D630 laptop with great idea on the extended battery that extended up front as additional rest pad - also with 7-row keyboard.<p>I did not realized how great they were until they were gone ... now all laptops have these counter productive island type keyboards ...
anfractuosityover 3 years ago
I rather like the Westmark: &#x27;Hermetus&#x27; Bottle Cap Opener, which can seal a beer bottle nicely, to save for later
znpyover 3 years ago
some random things without thinking too much:<p>- my regular Bialetti moka<p>- my texas instruments ti-86 (still rocking strong since 1997)<p>- thinkpads: T42, X220, w530, T440... they&#x27;re just great.<p>- my wenger&#x2F;swissgear carbon backpack<p>EDIT: actually my regular bialetti moka is replacing an induction moka (still from bialetti) because the induction moka is hard to open (due to the round base).
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chocksover 3 years ago
Perfectly cooked eggs every single time, bought this in 2014 still going strong: KRUPS F23070 Egg Cooker with Water Level Indicator, 7-Eggs Capacity, White <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.ca&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B00005KIRS&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.ca&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B00005KIRS&#x2F;</a>
micimizeover 3 years ago
This easy-clean garlic press recommended by America&#x27;s Test Kitchen: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;B0000CD0HX" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;B0000CD0HX</a><p>Clean-ability turned the press from a 1&#x2F;mo to a near-daily usage frequency.
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pentagramaover 3 years ago
Mixer Tap. In the &#x27;90s when my parents installed one of those in the bathroom, it was radical, blew my mind.
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s0rr0wskillover 3 years ago
Airpods.<p>I&#x27;ve owned 2 pairs for 4 years total now and they just work. Very convenient to use and the design is great and they fit well into my ears. Most inconvenience I&#x27;ve ever had was that they sometimes randomly don&#x27;t connect once in a while but a simple disconnect&#x2F;reconnect fixes that each time.
betwixthewiresover 3 years ago
Honestly, android M was the peak of mobile experience and it has only degraded since.<p>The one plus 3t is the best phone I&#x27;ve ever used. Close second is the nexus 5.<p>It&#x27;s a difficult question because you don&#x27;t really think about things that work seamlessly in your life, you think of the ones that have UX sticking points.
stblackover 3 years ago
Victorinox Spartan Swiss knife.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.swissarmy.com&#x2F;ca&#x2F;en&#x2F;Products&#x2F;Swiss-Army-Knives&#x2F;Medium-Pocket-Knives&#x2F;Spartan&#x2F;p&#x2F;1.3603" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.swissarmy.com&#x2F;ca&#x2F;en&#x2F;Products&#x2F;Swiss-Army-Knives&#x2F;M...</a>
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shaolinspiritover 3 years ago
I would be more from a dev perspective here<p>*nix OS&#x27;s and their terminal with various commands. The idea of pipe operator in terminal is just mind blowing, high praise to the guys who came up with this, they literally included FP concepts inside a terminal back in the late 60&#x27;s.
iosephover 3 years ago
My Stanley no. 5 handplane. It&#x27;s so simple in design but absolutely brilliant at doing its job, so solidly built ( I got it second hand I believe it&#x27;s at least 15 years old).<p>And there&#x27;s just something about it&#x27;s refined heft that makes it a pleasurable object to hold.
nazgulnarsilover 3 years ago
Pilot Parallel pens<p>Gerber Suspension<p>Geekey<p>Sanrenmu clone of a kershaw Cryo with no spring loaded flipping (I consider it dangerous)<p>Nalgene water bottle, I wrapped mine in cloth tape and it serves as a foam roller<p>Concept 2 erg<p>Mealsquares<p>...weird pick: Core Transformation by Connierae Andreas. After experimenting with a dozen different therapy modalities it blew them all out of the water.
pfortunyover 3 years ago
The traffic lights (the vertical ones, obviously).<p>The important sign (red) is at the top. So simple and so important.
MrAwesomeover 3 years ago
Been thinking about this a lot lately because I&#x27;ve been reading that Don Norman book, so I have several examples on the brain:<p>- 2000 Toyota MR2 Spyder. For me, it&#x27;s the perfect example of explicitly choosing qualities to sacrifice (straight line speed, utility, interstate ride comfort, safety) to maximize the qualities you desire (very affordable, zippy, perfectly balanced, convertible, charming, fun beyond belief in the corners). Doing so allowed them to make a mid engine convertible sports car, using just use the engine from a Corolla, meaning repairs are cheap and rare (once you or the original owner solve the oil-burning issue the engines are known for). There&#x27;s something so refreshing about design that doesn&#x27;t try at all to appeal to anyone but the target market, and does everything possible to appeal to them in every way that matters.<p>- SSH. The moment I first used passwordless ssh to run commands on a game server across the room from me was the moment I truly fell in love with computing.<p>- Rust. I won&#x27;t beat a dead horse, but the borrow checker was a real lightbulb moment for me in programming, and finally established an understanding of memory management and strong typing that has served me well even in other languages since.<p>- Thinkpad x220. The keyboard and the Linux compatibility alone were enough to convince me - the simple determined dependability has grown my love more and more over time.<p>- Nasal strips. Such a simple but clever little design to solve a host of pretty insidious air intake issues.<p>- Bass Ukulele. Being able to take a fully functional bass guitar on a plane as a carry-on is a transformative change. Helps too that they&#x27;re fun as all heck to plunk on.<p>- Magic: The Gathering, especially the original Ravnica block. The beauty, intricacy, and depth of the design has brought me to tears more than once.<p>- Team Fortress 2. Same, minus the tears and plus a lot of hootin&#x27; and hollerin&#x27;.<p>- Kinesis Advantage2 keyboard. The physical design an instant halt to my wrist pain from typing all day. It being so configurable is a delightful plus.<p>- DrinkMate&#x2F;SodaStream. Cheap, plentiful, easy carbonation in the home has helped keep this fella sober for years.<p>- Fellow gooseneck electric kettle. No frills, no gimmicks, just set the temperature, set the timer when you&#x27;re ready, and pour.<p>- Loaded Bhangra longboard. Another example of sacrificing what you don&#x27;t need (convenience, maneuverability) for what you want (immaculate balance and foot feel for dancing).<p>- Sony PSP. The degree to which it was ahead of its time still staggers me. I had an entire library of every NES and SNES games, plus a music player, plus an internet browser, all in my pocket in 2006. I still believe that if Sony had embraced instead of fought 3rd party applications, they would have taken over the world.<p>Honorable mentions: Marimekko backpack, Rotring mechanical pencils, the Shinkansen, the Taiwanese and Japanese traditional train systems, air-inflated blood flow restriction bands, vanilla rotation barbells, and the Kensington Expert Mouse with the ball and the 4 buttons.<p>Also many, many many many examples of evolved design in nature (birds, rats, succulents) and natural languages. I&#x27;m thinking in particular of the tone system of the Taiwanese dialect of Hokkien (there are obviously many others, that&#x27;s just the one I know), which seems unintuitive to the extreme to an outsider but allows for an incredible density of information and for allowing you to know at any moment in a spoken sentence when a clause ends, without the need for a pause.
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spyrefusedover 3 years ago
In its day I really liked Ableton Push (and 2 of course). The best hardware - software integration and experience I had ever tried. It allowed, at least in the &quot;sketch&quot; part, to start producing music by taking your eyes off the computer using software.
jftugaover 3 years ago
My Roku 3 is great. I bought it years ago and am still using it on my 1080p TVs. It just works, even behind a Pi-Hole ad blocking DNS server. It may crash once or twice a year (but then auto-reboot itself) and very rarely do I ever have to manually reboot it.
aristofunover 3 years ago
Telegram app on ios &amp; macos. One of the few near perfect consumers applications there are.
wellthisisgreatover 3 years ago
Swiftpoint Z mouse. Such a joy to use. Alas they aren&#x27;t producing anymore.<p>Obsidian.md - such a joy to use it for keyboard-based notetaking.<p>Zulip - group chat that is not Slack and not Teams and the threads actually work for comms.<p>Supernote A5X - a tangible upgrade over the pen-and-paper notetaking.
IgorPartolaover 3 years ago
A peg board for organizing tools.<p>Fiskars splitting axe. Estwing hatchet (the leather handled one). Kershaw knives. Victorinox knives.<p>First generation Honda Rebel: this bike is two bolts and a nut so super easy to work on, reliable, and gets amazing gas mileage.<p>Molle style backpack as a diaper bag.
klelattiover 3 years ago
Hacker News.
throwaway6734over 3 years ago
Various versions of the kindle. It&#x27;s got excellent battery life, is easy to travel with, feels great in my hands, and is just what I want from an e-reader. Especially the new version w&#x2F; the metal body and yellow-back light.
rawlandover 3 years ago
This toaster <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=1OfxlSG6q5Y" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=1OfxlSG6q5Y</a><p>It&#x27;s older than my partner and me together and still works like a charm.
lukaszkupsover 3 years ago
Surface Book 2 - gosh, it has been 3 years since I own this thing and I&#x27;m still amazed about the hinge design.<p>Surface Duo - while it has tons of flaws on the software level, it looks like a sci-fi device because of how slim it is!
fattybobover 3 years ago
You have clearly never tried to make a second cup - Allessi produce a far better designed coffee maker that shows a far more comprehensive design philosophy- I’ve been using mine for almost 40 yrs ( arghh so long!!!!)
smitty1eover 3 years ago
I have a Tumi backpack that is so nicely laid out that it practically loads itself. Sunglass pouch, carkey pockets in the shoulder straps.<p>Just very nicely done. When I&#x27;m finished beating it to shreds, I&#x27;ll require another.
gazeover 3 years ago
Moore Jig Grinding machines.
wedesoftover 3 years ago
RethinkDB. You copy the default configuration, restart the server, and you have a database supporting queries and real-time notifications, and a web interface to monitor and interact with the database.
Peanuts99over 3 years ago
I have a Nokia (now Withings) Steel HR watch. Very minimal design as far as smart watches go but is extremely reliable and the battery still lasts a month even after 5 years of ownership and daily use.
programmarchyover 3 years ago
Loom is fantastic for quickly creating and sharing desktop screencasts. I use it frequently to demo features to clients, or make recordings to supplement a question or comment for colleagues.
aidogover 3 years ago
I picked up this nice bluetooth keyboard the 3E neo recently. It&#x27;s a japanese brand. It fold&#x27;s into pocket size but feels so sturdy and the keys are the perfect size. So satisfying
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saalweachterover 3 years ago
The 2019 Volt dispensed with the five position climate control dial in favor of three toggle buttons, finally allowing me to select &quot;everything&quot; or &quot;defrost and panel&quot;.
theragraover 3 years ago
I really like my LG monitor controls. First, it it joystick that allows to select options really easily.Hundred times better than buttons. Second, sounds of turning on is very pleasant.
fattybobover 3 years ago
Good design? I have a brompton bicycle which certainly scores high, and also a strida bicycle which scores high also , even though quite different in design.
nabi_nafioover 3 years ago
For me, it&#x27;s undoubtedly my Macbook Air. Everything about it is near close to perfect. Apple really knows how to beautifully mesh hardware, and software.
swahover 3 years ago
Less frustrating: havaianas flip flops, stairs, elevators, car, toothbrush, pencil, mechanical pencil, roller pens, cups and silverware.<p>More frustrating: Linux on the desktop
wirthjasonover 3 years ago
Why is the bottom smooth and not flat like traditional octagon design? As far as I can tell that’s the only difference from this pot and their other ones.
hendryover 3 years ago
dwm window manager <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;dwm.suckless.org" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;dwm.suckless.org</a><p>incredibly influential and the source code is amazing
speedbirdover 3 years ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nichecoffee.co.uk&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nichecoffee.co.uk&#x2F;</a><p>Very thoughtful design and execution.
minikomiover 3 years ago
Recess first base yoyo<p>Perfect organic shape affordable responsive&#x2F;non-responsive modern yoyo. Cheap enough to use anywhere, light, great response..
dannyphantomover 3 years ago
Perhaps not the answer you&#x27;re looking for but &#x27;Mastering the Art of French Cooking&#x27; has remained a top-tier cookbook.
JCWasmx86over 3 years ago
GNOME. Everything is really intuitive, it doesn&#x27;t really feel, like you use a computer, but the computer is an extension of you
lostloginover 3 years ago
The Langstroth beehive.<p>The parts are cheap, interchangeable, work with the bees and are pretty obvious in the wet, the dark and to a beginner.
ptidhommeover 3 years ago
I&#x27;m fond of OpenBSD, especially because of its clean design (user-facing at least, can&#x27;t speak of internals).
arriuover 3 years ago
Spoon, who would have thought? It just works
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johnwheelerover 3 years ago
Benson amps Vinny Combo.<p>Built-in attenuator, excellent spring reverb, and easy to dial in edge of breakup. Great clean and dirty tones
EMM_386over 3 years ago
Samsung T5 SSD.
sas224dbmover 3 years ago
My Sony ICF SW-1 shortwave radio. Perfect backpacking travel companion in Asia in the 90s. It just worked.
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logotypeover 3 years ago
Mahlkönig PEAK. It’s a coffee grinder, the build quality is really, really good. Super solid, and heavy.
gigatexalover 3 years ago
As a piece of kit, purely hardware, my iPhone. Sometimes I just take the case off an marvel at it.
cghover 3 years ago
La Sportiva Miura VS climbing shoes.
stjohnswartsover 3 years ago
My Parker safety razor. Simple, cheap, effective, no batteries needed.<p>My lodge cast iron skillet and dutch oven.
MichaelMoser123over 3 years ago
pokemon-go, i mean it is a game, it doesn&#x27;t really exist, but it does exist, because of the augmented reality thing. (playing it with my kids, don&#x27;t really know if it is good for them, as it blurs the line between the real and the imaginary...)
redwoodover 3 years ago
Considering we just had Thanksgiving and I love it with pumpkin pie, whipped cream cans!
a3nover 3 years ago
Metal fork, spoon, knife, ceramic plate, ceramic mug.<p>Thank you, long forgotten prehistoric people.
intricatedetailover 3 years ago
Mitutoyo caliper. Always get perfect measurements. It saved me a lot of money.
jounkerover 3 years ago
The Oxo potato peeler. It’s comfortable, durable, and it works beautifully.
johnwalkrover 3 years ago
Google maps on iPhone 1. Even with Edge network speeds and without proper GPS, an online map in your pocket with pinch zoom was simply a gamechanger. Everything was intuitive to use and the virtual keyboard worked better than anyone expected. Behind the scenes, I understand it was due to a predictive algorithm.<p>If you think about it, airplane toilets. Small and efficient. They tend to have a clear design cue to know how to push open the door. The door lock also turns on the light, so it’s almost impossible to accidentally leave the door unlocked.<p>Frequenter suitcases. Only available in Japan, they have completely silent, user-replaceable wheels. The one I have is exactly the largest possible carryon size for most airlines.<p>Anker 45W usb-c GaN charger. It’s not much bigger than a standard iPhone charger. Overall a bit smaller since actually, since the power blades fold inside which is a nice touch. I just travelled for a month. I brought only this charger, one lightning cable and one usb-c cable. It was good enough, with a little bit of foresight to swap things out, to keep my all of my work and personal stuff charged (2 MacBooks, 2 iPhones, Nintendo switch, mouse and usb-c shaver). Made possible by the standardization of usb-c. It’s a bit of a nightmare for all of the various incompatibilities for data transfer and video but for charging it’s great!<p>GPS in cars, in Japan. They are usually slow and have terrible UIs. But, they usually give a picture perfect view of which lane to be in, even showing you the highway signs exactly as they appear in reality. And even 10+ years ago, a highway radio system broadcasts traffic conditions and (I think) highway toll information to the GPS units.<p>3M command strip hooks. Essential for home renters and have a clear indication of how to remove them.<p>Ski boots with a walk mode. At the lower end they let you walk easier but may be a bit less stiff. At the high end, they let you choose between touring mode and downhill mode, barely have a stiffness penalty and as a bonus let you walk easier. If you have a budget of under $800 don’t even try high end ones on because they are impossible to not buy. These are interesting to research too because it turns out there are only a handful of high end ski boot designers in the world and some of them are on the ski boot forums to answer your questions.<p>My biggest one is AirTags. They seem to be completely unadvertised recently, probably because when they first came out there was discussion about privacy. Like AirPods, you just open them and they sync and start working.<p>They are cheap for what they are, I got 8 of them and put one in every bag I use. I’m a forgetful person and have left many things behind over the years.<p>So far I’ve conveniently been able to find stuff I’ve left in another room, which is nice and once was alerted when I left my suitcase in one of the main stations in Paris. I got the alert that I left it behind well before I got on my train without it.<p>When I demo them to people, they are usually blown away when they realize they work anywhere there is an iPhone nearby. Not only near my iPhone.<p>I also put one in expensive shipped items for work. Has been great to be able to see where stuff is. It works reliable to things show up on the tarmac as soon as a cargo flight lands.
chalcolithicover 3 years ago
Amiga :)
robertwt7over 3 years ago
Rust. Because it’s amazing
swader999over 3 years ago
Stihl MS 262 pro saw. Used it for days this summer. Thing never quit.
I_complete_meover 3 years ago
bic biro, light switch, mouse, calculator, bulb, fingers, bicycle, curtains, sheets, armchairs, roads, cars, glasses, floorboards, radio, computers, forks, toilet paper, books, steel;
throwawayboiseover 3 years ago
12&quot; Mac PowerBook G4
princevegeta89over 3 years ago
Netflix. Amazing and consistent user interface on every platform
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aristofunover 3 years ago
Airpods pro, ipod, logitech k308 keyboard, typescript language
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dmurthyover 3 years ago
The ring&#x2F;silent switch on an iPhone. It just works.
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GrumpyNlover 3 years ago
Older car interiors, all the knobs on a familiar place.
moneywoesover 3 years ago
Old can opener
gaoryrtover 3 years ago
I&#x27;d say Rollei 35 film camera.
fangirlosover 3 years ago
MacOSx the software and Mac laptops
wrycoderover 3 years ago
A Gillette Pivot disposable razor.
mrichover 3 years ago
Rust and Python, in that order.
yumrajover 3 years ago
Second generation Toyota Prius.
pmcollinsover 3 years ago
roost v2 laptop stand braun classic analog alarm clock apple IIGS keyboard
aj7over 3 years ago
Bridgeport milling machine.
steeleover 3 years ago
Chopsticks
peterfieldover 3 years ago
Cable-ties
satisficeover 3 years ago
Tivo
Terry_Rollover 3 years ago
Trangia cooking stove.<p>It will be something to pass on to your kids if you like camping.<p>I have a version of the doussal they dont sell anymore which is one of these <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;trangia-stove&#x2F;trangia-stove-25-large&#x2F;duossal-d&#x2F;storm-cooker-25-21-uld.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;trangia-stove&#x2F;trangia-stove-25-la...</a><p>a kettle <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;kettles&#x2F;200325.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;kettles&#x2F;200325.html</a> a green cutting board&#x2F;strainer <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;accessories&#x2F;multi-disc-md25.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;accessories&#x2F;multi-disc-md25.html</a> and I got a 1Litre fuel bottle as an extra <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;accessories&#x2F;fuel-bottle-1-0l.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.trangia.se&#x2F;en&#x2F;accessories&#x2F;fuel-bottle-1-0l.html</a><p>The kettle and green cutting board fit inside the main setup (pots) so it takes up no extra space and you can stuff a couple of knives, forks and spoons inside the setup as well.<p>You can comfortably cook for two with this so its weight between two backpackers with other equipment like tent is not that heavy!<p>All you need to clean it is hot water and a metal scourer like one of these <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.diy.com&#x2F;departments&#x2F;stainless-steel-scourer-pack-of-4&#x2F;3663602564775_BQ.prd" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.diy.com&#x2F;departments&#x2F;stainless-steel-scourer-pack...</a> which fits nicely inside the kettle.<p>I got the Stainless Ally combo because you need to clean it and stainless cleans easily with a simple metal scourer, you can even get black soot off it easily so you cant ruin it like you can with non-stick coated camping stoves.<p>You can run it on pure alcohol, methylated spirits, petrol (gasoline) and other flammable liquids, although Meths is recommended and with a push even small twigs, branches and kindling if you run out of flammable liquids.<p>You can also get a pressurised gas burner for it as well which I dont have so cant comment on.<p>I&#x27;ve cooked for 2 near Ben Macdui wild camping on the Cairngorm plateau in a few feet of snow one Easter when the UK was getting hit with plenty of snow, a Met Office amber alert gale force storm not far from The Devils kitchen, Snowdonia another time I like to test things to destruction and this is one tool which gets my recommendation!<p>Plenty of decent evening meals, none of this freeze dried just add water nonsense and a decent cooked breakfast in the mornings, namely sausages, bacon, hash browns, baked beans, black pudding and eggs with HP Brown Sauce. Most of the weight in my rucksack when I go wild camping is good food!<p>The two pots are slightly different sizes so they fit inside each other russian doll like one way but the other way they stack on top of each other so with the green cutting board for a pot lid, you can keep cooked food warm&#x2F;hot whilst cooking the rest of a meal up. Yes you may be swapping two stacked pots with the frying pan periodically if you want to do a fryup for breakfast or steak, mash and veg for an evening meal, but if you like cooking thats part of the challenge of having decent food in the most remote inhospitable parts of the world.<p>Its very bash proof as well, I&#x27;ve seen state of the pressurised gas burners break out of the box on expeditions whilst being pumped where as the Trangia has no moving parts to break, its the best designed product for me because of its simplicity and ruggedness. You could chuck your rucksac down the side of a mountain and it would still work!<p>A little tip, if you like a Full English breakfast dont take a bottle of cooking oil, take some hard solid blocks of pure saturated fat aka beef dripping. It doesnt melt except in the hottest of environments so its still solid during a British summer and you wont risk a flimsy bottle of cooking oil splitting inside your rucksack and you dont have to have the weight of a ruggedised bottle to store cooking oil inside your rucksack. Every good chef knows, is where the flavour comes from whilst giving you the calories to do some very nice expeditions.<p>When camping in the snow when its below freezing, take a couple of fuel bottles as you will burn through more fuel especially if the only water around you is melting snow.<p>All in all it gets my top marks, best designed, could not recommend it enough prize, design award, etc etc every time.
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lcordierover 3 years ago
Swing-A-Way can opener.
enzover 3 years ago
A 4-Color ballpoint pen.
__alexsover 3 years ago
Zojirushi thermos flask.
JaggerJoover 3 years ago
TS-100 Soldering Iron.
slipwalkerover 3 years ago
a bic (cristal) pen
SteveNutsover 3 years ago
Stormy Kromer cap
brightballover 3 years ago
Leatherman Skeletool<p>Potato peeler
jmakovover 3 years ago
Clickouse
dqpbover 3 years ago
Workflowy
Russelfutureover 3 years ago
This may sound silly, but: - my hacked iPad. It&#x27;s first generation, original software was stupid, but with &quot;RedSn0w&quot; and all of Freeman&#x27;s Cydia apps, it has turned into my favourite device. It has a full, Linux-like file system, I can have all sorts of material on it, SSH works fine, can use it as a controller, and I can still browse (some) internet sites. (Using it to write this). I have Macbook Pro, a bunch of Linux boxes, couple of nice Acer laptops, but this ancient iPad is so very well made, and all the Cydia stuff just works. My partner has a modern iPhone, but I like this old iPad, where each key on the screen is half-an-inch across! - my AR-15. AK&#x27;s are prohibited where I live (and so now is my AR), but folks need to understand what a fine triumph in modular design and excellent ergonomics, the American-designed AR-15 rifle really is. Early rifle designs were just not good - soldiers would pull the trigger, and be blinded as the breech blew up in their face. The AR is light, lethal, and reliable. Like most good design, it is the result of continuous improvements over a long time span. - The Piper PA-28 &quot;Warrior&quot; general aviation light aircraft. This is just an amazingly successful design effort. Everything in aircraft design is a series of trade-offs, weight, strength, durability, reliability, ease-of-use, safety, complexity, simplicity, and so on. I did all my fight training as a young fellow on Cessna 172&#x27;s, which are also excellent examples of very good design. But the 172 feels like what it is, to fly - a solid, simple workhorse. The PA-28, with a 160 or 180 hp engine, manages to feel quite different - like being able to drive a Camaro around in the sky. It&#x27;s not a Ferrari, but it had several fine design features that made it feel like a much more substantial and flyable aircraft, especially for a kid learning to fly. It was real fun. The wings were tapered. Compared to older &quot;Cherokee&quot; models, which did not have tapered wings, the difference was significant. It is, of course, a low-wing aircraft. This makes for a much more attractive flying experience - you are driving a platform, not hanging from a wing, in a little box. And this aircraft has a stabilator, instead of a tail-plane and an elevator. On the Piper, as you pull and push the control wheel, the whole rear wing tilts up and down. This is just a genius design feature, and gives the aircraft a nice lively feel, even if you are flying the cheapest, entry-level version, which does not have retractable gear. (If renting at a flying club, you probably won&#x27;t have any retractables - since some student might forget to drop the gear, and may well wipe out the aircraft.) Our club had one Warrior, and it was a very big treat, when I could book it and take it away up north, for a weekend. The little design genius features, made it very fun to fly. I recall dropping the flaps involved pulling on a lever, much like a sports-car emergency brake. (On the Cessna, to put down flaps, you throw a switch on the panel, and listen for the servo-motors). But on the Piper, you pull on this lever, and <i>feel</i> the wind on the flaps, as you pull them down. You literally could feel the air, as you flew thru it. And with those tapered wings, and the rear stabilator, you could drop a wing and dive down quick, and the whole experience was wonderful, because of these specific design improvements over the old square ( non-tapered) wings of the older &quot;Cherokee&quot; models. - lastly, (call me crazy, if you must), the original APL computer language, which I learned when very young, because it was the only interactive environment available. APL was (is) very different, but it turned out to be an amazingly useful languange and environment to learn. I met Ken Iverson (the inventor author of APL), and he and I did not see eye-to-eye on things. But APL was a work of genius. APL was very popular inside IBM in the early days, and the first IBM P&#x2F;C was actually pre-dated by an IBM Personal Computer that ran APL, called the SCAMP, which came out in 1973, if I remember correctly. I still use APL applications, and we use them, because they make us money. And that is always important in any product design... :)
szemy2over 3 years ago
Airplanes
egypturnashover 3 years ago
When I was a kid, the tub in the bathroom had two knobs to control the faucet and shower: one marked with a red H, one marked with a blue C. Easy to understand, consistent with the faucets in the kitchen and bathroom sinks, easy to control. There was the little thing to pull up and redirect the flow from the faucet to the showerhead.<p>Every tub&#x2F;shower fixture in the apartments I&#x27;ve lived in and all the hotels I&#x27;ve visited since has been different. They have all replaced this simple arrangement with some godawful thing that tries to combine the two variables of &quot;amount of hot water&quot; and &quot;amount of cold water&quot; into one knob&#x2F;lever&#x2F;dial&#x2F;whatever. Usually with absolutely no markings. It takes an annoying amount of time to figure these out the first time and sometimes they remain annoying forever - the one in my current apartment is mounted at a weird angle, so &quot;off&quot; is <i>slightly</i> to the right of pointing the handle straight down; maximum hot water is somewhere below pointing straight right, and pointing straight right is cold. Pointing straight down is an annoying, chilly trickle.<p>Every time I take a shower I miss the simplicity of two knobs, clearly marked.<p>----<p>The humble handlebar-mounted bicycle gear shift. So much more pleasant than reaching down to a little lever mounted on the frame like I did before these became standard on even the cheapest bikes. Just move my hand over on the handlebar a little, grab, and twist: there&#x27;s a little resistance, then a distinct <i>click</i> as it moves to the next spot, which changes the tension in the cable and makes the derailleur do its job of moving the chain from one gear to another. It is not perfect, but its failure modes are much more prone to &quot;a little out of alignment and now you skip over a gear or two in the middle&quot; than &quot;it&#x27;s super easy to shift the chain off the gears entirely&quot;. People have come up with other ways to alter the gear ratio between the crank and the wheel but they are all much more complex and power-hungry than the grip-shifter and derailleur combination.<p>----<p>If you want a specific brand and model of thing, my Tom Binh &quot;Pilot&quot; bag is really nice. Durable, reasonably cute, carries my computer and everything I need for a day going out to cafes to work, with enough room for a change of clothes or two if I stuff it tightly. Has some nice touches like a pocket in the center with a drain hole for a water bottle or a compact umbrella, and a pocket in the back that unzips on the bottom so you can empty it and slide it over the extended handle of your big rolling bag when traveling. I&#x27;ve had it for like half a decade and it&#x27;s been my main bag for a lot of that time. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tombihn.com&#x2F;collections&#x2F;travel-bags&#x2F;products&#x2F;pilot?variant=15776004833343" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tombihn.com&#x2F;collections&#x2F;travel-bags&#x2F;products&#x2F;pil...</a>
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2OEH8eoCRo0over 3 years ago
M4 carbine
fourstarover 3 years ago
Chemex.
flogover 3 years ago
Porsche’s.
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whalesaladover 3 years ago
AirPods.
fdisklover 3 years ago
thule chariot bike trailer
beforgeover 3 years ago
usb until version 3.
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stitched2gethrover 3 years ago
Vans shoes.
quiffledwergover 3 years ago
The best thing I ever used was iPod shuffle mini.<p>It was the perfect design, nothing could be added nor taken away to make it better.<p>But apple being Apple they redesigned it to be crap then discontinued it.<p>On the topic of designing great things and Apple …. Can I say that I hate Apples “minimalism above all else” approach to design. For example I want computers with lots of ports - what’s the point in buying a minimal Apple computer only to instantly plug it into another box that provides the basic ports I need for keyboard mouse external disks and camera? Somehow though the designers at Apple think this is the optimum design. I do acknowledge recent Macs bring ports back but still not enough.<p>I also hate it that Apple got rid of the standard headphone jack - for gods sake why? Answer: Apple designers.
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madengrover 3 years ago
HP 8566B spectrum analyzer and 8510C network analyzer. HP RPN calculators. Really any late 80’s and early 90’s HP test equipment. Built like tanks and designed by engineers for engineers.
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Lhiwover 3 years ago
Hakko 950 soldering iron. It&#x27;s an analog dial version of an extremely awful digital interface. It&#x27;s small and compact so takes up little desk space, heats up fast, has incredibly stable heat and adjustments don&#x27;t require looking at what your hand is doing.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.hakko.com&#x2F;english&#x2F;products&#x2F;hakko_fx950.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.hakko.com&#x2F;english&#x2F;products&#x2F;hakko_fx950.html</a><p>There are similar things on the market but nothing that ties it altogether quite so succinctly.
quiffledwergover 3 years ago
Bialetti is at risk of going out of business so buy them while you can.
beervirusover 3 years ago
SawStop table saw. It‘a a great saw in general, but what absolutely blew me away was the assembly. Extremely well thought out, from the order in which boxes of parts are opened, to the instructions, to the assembly procedure itself. I could not come up with a single improvement.
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