marssaxman 3 days ago

I've been advocating mandatory shower-helmet laws for many years now; it would make as much sense as a lot of the other nanny-state regulation does.

  • thaumasiotes 2 days ago

    On the other hand, mandatory rough surfaces on the floor of showers seem pretty reasonable.

    • doubled112 2 days ago

      My friend's parents dropped a shampoo bottle in their new build, and it broke through the bathtub. I hope this rough surface will be more durable.

      I'm imagining some rough sandpaper layer that comes off every time you shower until it's smooth anyway. Glue is expensive, you know?

      • ghaff 2 days ago

        There are smoother and rougher tile surfaces. When getting tile put in my house I've made something of a point of avoiding the very slickest/smoothest tile.

    • ghaff 2 days ago

      There's so much about showers in hotels that I hate a good proportion of the time: super-slick tiles, high step-in tubs, accompanied by no handholds. I've gotten more sensitive to this over time but even when I was much younger, nearly took spills a couple of times.

    • marssaxman 2 days ago

      That's fair. It's one thing to tell people "don't build things in such a way that other people would be put at risk", and quite another to threaten people with punishment for choosing to take risks themselves.

Qem 3 days ago

We probably should have lanyard-equipped showers.

  • bluGill 3 days ago

    people will hang themselves on the lanyard and die. Not all such cases will be suicide.