Ask HN: Life-changing purchases since 2020? (Under $100 and under $1000)

278 points by systemkwiat 5 days ago

609 comments | 2 pages

Hey folks,

I’m curious – is there anything you've bought in the past few years (since 2020) that really changed something in your life? Could be anything, like a gadget, a course, a subscription, even a massage or some random item you didn't think much of at first.

Let’s split it up into two categories:

- Under $100 - Under $1000

What did you get? And what was the impact? I’d love to hear the stories – big or small changes, whatever made a difference for you.

Thanks in advance for sharing!

miloignis 5 days ago

Under $100:

1) A bidet! Got one in the pandemic when toilet paper was scarce and I wanted to be more efficient, but now I'll never go back. The Tushy ones are good.

2) A safety razor & accessories. I get a cheaper, closer, less irritating shave, and I get to customize every part of it. This can certainly be a rabbithole you spend a lot of money on, but you can get a solid customized starter kit for under $100 that will be totally solid, and from then on you're saving money over cartridges and gel unless you really want to splurge.

I'll second the electric toothbrush suggestion too, its great having my teeth fel clean and smooth.

  • fnimick 5 days ago

    Safety razors are amazing and life changing. Even if you have something basic it's better for your skin than a cartridge razor, plus it's better for the planet (way less plastic), plus it's way less expensive! I don't know how they are still a niche item.

    For anyone who wants to get started, I recommend (no affiliation): - the henson razor for those who want something on automatic. It's less efficient (worse at cutting long hair) but it's basically impossible to cut yourself with it due to the small blade gap - the rockwell 6s for tinkerers. It has 6 different settings for blade gap so you can choose your favorite, switch it up if you skipped shaving for a day and have longer hair, etc

    • tomcam 15 hours ago

      I abandoned safety razors because the handles are minuscule. Never found one that didn’t cramp up my big farmer hands.

  • stavros 5 days ago

    Yesss bidet post upvote!

    Seriously, whenever I stay somewhere without a bidet I feel like a caveman. It's just such a quality of life improvement, it's crazy.

    Under $1000: My 3D printer. I just super love 3D printers.

    • Corrado 5 days ago

      Same for me. The bidet is absolutely a life changer.

      And the BambuLab's A1 3D printer (and mini-AMS) was by far my favorite under $1000 purchase. I've already printed some fidget "tools", toys for the grandchildren, toys for the children, and even a couple of useful tools for me. As a bonus I get some more experience in CAD and other 3D design tools. It's turning into quite a hobby for me.

      • stavros 5 days ago

        Hell, the A1 mini is something like $199, it's such a steal I'm thinking of buying some to gift to friends.

    • jorisboris 5 days ago

      What do you use the 3D printer for?

      • stavros 5 days ago

        I get this question a lot, and I never have a good answer. The best way to describe it is that it's a tool, so it unlocks a whole solution space that wasn't there before.

        Before, I used to live with random little annoyances so much that I couldn't even see them as annoyances. After you get something that can solve all of them, your mind just unlocks.

        Toilet seat won't stay up? Print a hook. Taking my glasses out of the glove compartment takes too long? Make a custom glasses holder. The cat eats too much? Print a cat feeder. My USB hub slides around too much? Print a bracket to hold it down. Too many devices on my desk? Print under-desk mounts for them.

        The list just goes on and on and on, I've printed probably thousands of useful things, especially for my hobbies.

  • cameronh90 5 days ago

    For anyone in the UK interested in getting a bidet: most normal bidets are illegal due to our water safety backflow prevention regulations. As a minimum you need a break tank - a double check valve isn’t sufficient.

    • oliwarner 5 days ago

      I know this applies for bumguns —various water boards have published guidance— but a lot of the under-seat bidets retract [without positive water pressure].

      There's no risk of the spout sitting in and siphoning dirty toilet water it back into your supply. I'm neither a lawyer or a plumber but these seem like they might be okay.

      • Const-me 5 days ago

        > There's no risk of the spout sitting in and siphoning dirty toilet water it back into your supply

        In many places in Europe tap water is safe to drink. However, hot tap water is not.

        The regulations mentioned by GP might protect safety of the cold tap water from intake of hot tap water. Which is easy to do unintentionally when mixing hot and cold water.

  • gwbas1c 4 days ago

    I bought some Tushies for my house and they were awful, they were so thick that they broke my toilet seats. I then bought new toilet seats and little stick-on bumpers, but they fell off.

    I then visited a friend who had an older Tushy and it was thin enough that he had no problems.

    It's like they switched to a cheaper version without testing it, and then marketed the hell out of it.

    I ended up replacing all my Tushies with Amazon's toilet seat with a built in bidet. It's decent.

  • jtwaleson 5 days ago

    My parents in law lived in the middle east for a long time, and we all got used to bidets over there. I've had a "mini shower head" version next to my toilet for the last 15 years or so. A bit afraid that it'll start leaking at some point, but so far it's holding up great. I would never go back to TP only.

    • al_borland 4 days ago

      Without meaning to get too personal, what is the technique for using those? When I took a work trip to India the office had what I think you’re talking about. In the US, it’s like a sprayer on a kitchen sink. I didn’t dare try it out, as I couldn’t think of a scenario where I tried it for the first time and didn’t soak my clothes. I didn’t want that to be my reputation at the office.

      • jtwaleson 4 days ago

        You hold it relatively close to the area that needs cleaning. Adjust the pressure as needed using the control on the handle. Then use TP (just to dry), in my experience this is optional in warmer climates.

    • HenryBemis 2 days ago

      I have seen that 'mini shower head' in multiple homes and hotels in Finland and Russia (but not in Sweden or Denmark). It is amazing!!

      A side-hack for that matter is to switch from plain-TP to wet-wipes. Some time ago I visited a friend who had younglings, and treated myself to a pamper-wet-wipe and it was amazing.

      • jtwaleson 9 hours ago

        The sewage system won't be happy with wet wipes. Caused huge problems in some areas as it doesn't break down.

  • dangus 5 days ago

    I would asterisk the bidet suggestion just to say that higher end bidet seats that cost starting around $400 are wildly better the cheap ones, especially the unseated ones.

    I’ve bought the cheap kind, got tired of it and tossed it, then years later went with a more expensive Toto (around $400) and it’s like a completely different experience.

    The Toto keeps itself and the toilet cleaner for longer, it has options for gentle spray and oscillating movement, it’s entirely controlled by electronic remote rather than a crude manual knob, the water and seat are heated, it detects when you are sitting down and operates accordingly, and it even has a warm air dryer.

  • Kiro 5 days ago

    All bidets I've looked at including Tushy seem really complicated to install (basically having to redo the plumbing) and I don't understand how so many people can just buy and install one like it's nothing. Am I imagining things?

    Edit: Not in the US and the plumbing looks a bit like this, but without the nuts so you can't easily disconnect a part of it: https://static.byggahus.se/attachments/images/large/341/3416...

    • Digory 5 days ago

      If you can handle putting the nozzle on your garden hose, you should be able to handle it.

      In the US, the water pipe almost always connects to the toilet through a small shutoff valve. After the valve, it connects to the toilet through a "supply." The supply is basically a short garden hose, with screw-on connections at both ends.

      Shut off the water at the wall. Flush to empty the toilet tank. Unscrew the hose at the toilet, and screw that end into what amounts to a y, or splitter that comes with the bidet. From the splitter, screw one side back into the toilet connection; the other goes to the bidet itself. Turn back on the water at the wall.

      (This is for a simple cold-water bidet. If you need heated water or electricity, it can be more complex.)

      • taftster 5 days ago

        I mean, but don't you need warm water and/or electricity? I can't see liking a bidet if it's basically just cold tap water shooting up my bum. Not sure that's going to do it for me.

        I've always thought that both hot water and electricity would be a minimal barrier to entry for a bidet. And that neither of these exist in a typical toilet closet. Am I fundamentally wrong about this??

    • raphaelb 5 days ago

      It depends on what your toilet supply lines are like and if you use a cold water only or a cold/hot water bidet, but a cold water only one (not nearly as uncomfortable as imagined before trying it) is very easy to install as long as your supply line has a shutoff valve and is relatively flexible.

      It takes 15-20 minutes and it basically consists of unscrewing a few things and screwing them back together again.

    • tapoxi 5 days ago

      I bought a Tushy during the pandemic, it took about 10 minutes and a flathead screwdriver.

      I liked it so much that when I had a new bathroom installed a year later I put in a Toto Washlet.

      • 7373737373 5 days ago

        I feel like Toto is failing with their marketing, since people are not really aware of their products outside of Japan. No good and cheap alternatives either

    • MisterTea 5 days ago

      Those are compression fittings which we also use in the USA for sink and toilet connections. Standard size here is 3/8 inch which is the outer diameter of the tubing. They are easy to work with as you only need a tube cutter (or hacksaw with fine tooth pitch) and a wrench. You cut the tube, slide a compression nut over, slide the ferrule(s) on, insert the tube into the fitting, finger tighten the compression nut, make sure everything is aligned then tighten nut with wrench. No solder, no fancy crimp tools. You can disassemble and reassemble without leaks. The only issue is the ferrule winds up becoming swaged to the tube after wrench tightening so you have to cut the tube end off behind the ferrule if you want to replace the nut.

      However, instead of using rigid metal or plastic tubing you commonly find a flexible hose assembly[1]. Only fancy installs use custom formed polished rigid tube for the look. We also tend to leave most of the plumbing in the walls and only the shut off valve protrudes from the wall. Maybe there are flexible hoses available in your region.

      When I installed my bidet all I needed was a 3/8 compression tee[2] which they make specifically to tap shutoff valves. The bidet came with a 3/8 connection hose so that went to the tee and I was up and running. The big issue was electric - no outlets in the bathroom. So having seen how Japan loves extension cords I too used one, ran a 12 AWG cord out to the hall to a GFI adapter plugged into a socket. Jank but highly unlikely to cause a fire.

      [1] https://www.homedepot.com/b/Plumbing-Plumbing-Parts-Supply-L...

      [2] https://www.amazon.com/Breezliy-Lead-Free-Compression-Outlet...

    • mikestew 5 days ago

      To follow on to user infecto’s sibling comment, for most U. S. homes, it is probably fifteen minutes of work. Shut off water, connect t-line, bolt down new toilet seat, sorted. It shouldn’t be complicated for most installations.

    • dyeje 5 days ago

      I ended up buying a travel bidet because I couldn’t install one at our house for various reasons. It’s basically just a squeeze bottle with an angled head. Works great!

      • roland35 4 days ago

        Just don't get it mixed up with your water bottle!!

    • infecto 5 days ago

      US based plumbing. You are imagining things. Most/all resi toilets in the US use a flex hose to connect the toilet to your water supply. Its usually a threaded connection. All these style of bidets simply have a T off of this connection.

      • Kiro 5 days ago

        Not in the US. The pipe just goes straight into the toilet. When googling around seeing articles about installing Tushy when you have rigid pipes they are still much more flexible than mine, with separate parts you can disconnect and replace.

      • [removed] 5 days ago
        [deleted]
  • K0balt 5 days ago

    I’ll Third a bidet. Once you experience the exhilarating bliss of cleaning your nether regions with fresh, clean water, you’ll never willingly go back to smearing excrement around your fiddly bits with the dry paper.

    • foobarian 5 days ago

      Sorry if this is getting into TMI territory but how does the bidet avoid dissolving the unwanted material and spraying it all over everywhere? And how does one dry this without toilet paper?

      • BurdensomeCount 5 days ago

        It works under the same principle as pressure washing, as long as the water pressure is high enough the final result is completely clean. Too high pressure can lead to material flying around everywhere but there's a very large range where the pressure is high enough to clean you but not enough to spray things around.

        Drying is a personal preference and isn't as important anymore as you're clean down there now. Toilet paper is one option but you don't have to do it (I don't dry for reference) as it'll dry out by itself in a few minutes once you put your underwear on to absorb the water (which is fine because you're completely clean down there so it really is just clean water left).

      • wingerlang a day ago

        > And how does one dry this without toilet paper?

        Normally you still use some small amount of toilet paper to dry away most of the water.

      • Cyph0n 5 days ago

        By controlling the water pressure.

  • iKlsR 5 days ago

    I'd add a cheap hand massager to that list, just basic compression and some heat with vibration can do wonders for your hand after a day of coding, bonus if it kneads as well.

  • declan_roberts 5 days ago

    Second a bidet. Used one in Asia and bought one immediately on returning to the USA.

  • scruple 5 days ago

    I've had my safety razor (a Merkur) since 2008 or 2009 and I am still working through the original pack of 1,000 razorblades that I got with it. I keep a beard year-round so I don't really shave much. Incredible value purchase, with very minimal effort it has remained practically as good as new.

  • ingend88 4 days ago

    Is there a travel bidet that falls into the same category in terms of the quality ? I have tried many but nothing works at the same level as tushy and thought i would make one myself! Would anyone from this community buy one if I made a very strong force bidet thats portable ?

    • bidet_user 4 days ago

      You’re looking for a culo clean:

      https://www.amazon.com/CuloClean-Portable-Compatible-Discree...

      I have the high-end Totos installed at home, and occasionally still revert to this. It’s the best.

      Have one in my travel bag, car, backup in luggage, briefcase. All you need is a cheap water bottle.

      Test it at home so you know how to use it. Keep it in a tiny ziploc with extra tp (for drying in a public WC)

  • bigyikes 5 days ago

    I can’t live without a bidet but the Tushy ones are no good - tight knobs and awkward spray angle.

    • dmckeon 5 days ago

      Luxe Neo bidet attachment - easy to tee into supply, fits under toilet seat, options for rear/male only, or both rear/front male/female separate spray nozzles.

  • theFlamewithin 4 days ago

    I am so glad you mentioned this. My son is intellectually challenged, and teaching him to wipe himself is . . . challenging. A bidet seems like an excellent game changer. Cheers!

  • telcal 5 days ago

    Yes for a bidet! My wife wanted one, I thought I'd hate it but it really is fantastic. We have a Toto Washlet C5. Heated seat, heated spray, warm air dryer. Had to cancel the Amazon toilet paper auto-delivery.

  • HellDunkel 5 days ago

    A bidet for under 100$?

    • dole 5 days ago

      Luxe Neo bidets are like $40-60, sturdy, easy to install and yes, rather life-changing.

caseyy 5 days ago

Under $100:

- A dumbphone. Even if I’m not using it anymore, it has shown me what life I could be living without distractions. My anxiety and stress levels went down from about the second day using it, I became much more aware of my emotional state and the environment around me, it was a noticeable shift.

I no longer buy the arguments that we can control our smartphone addictions with will. The technology is too optimised for most of us to break free. And the addictions — too subtle for most to notice.

It may simply be a physiological addiction to checking email or for notifications every now and then. If you feel like you’d be missing out unless you check your phone several times a day, you have it. If you reach for your phone without thinking when you’re bored, you have it. It’s all about compulsive action.

I think much of the population is addicted. Certainly most of the online types.

Every interaction with your phone pulls you out of being present!

  • shiroiushi 5 days ago

    I really don't see the point of a dumbphone: it seems a lot like buying a ham radio and trying to use that for your daily life. Who am I going to talk to with a dumbphone? No one actually does "phone calls" any more using voice calling, at least in my corner of the world. (They do for work, but I'm not in a customer-facing job so I don't.)

    • 6510 5 days ago

      There seems to be a hole in the market for a dumb phone that does sms well. Perhaps we can even get rid of phone calls entirely and just have an sms device with a camera.

      • Foyerr 5 days ago

        I would suggest an eink phone if this is what you're looking for. I, for example have the Hisense A5. Can do everything a regular android phone can it's just less effective

        • 6510 4 days ago

          Then you end up doing all kinds of android things. I don't want a toaster that is also a casino and a web browser. It needs to be a thoughtless process between the idea of having toast and eating it. "lets have toast", "ahh, nice toast"

          These are a good example

          https://www.tripsavvy.com/best-digital-translators-4154191

          They just translate, no candy crush, no angry birds, no hero wars, no facebook, no push notifications how you've spend 123 minutes per day using your phone. You can take it to the pub and not end up playing hayday, doom scroll twiiter or hey, I can spend the night reading hn, and ohh is it closing time already? Did anyone else have a good time?

          The assumption one can be strong enough to not do that isn't supported by the data.

    • EasyMark 4 days ago

      In the USA -lots- of people use SMS only, and it’s their main communication. You can do that on a dumb phone, and if you tend to get into doom scrolling or TikTok dance scrolling it can allow you to recover a lot of free time back. No SM? Count me in.

      • shiroiushi 2 days ago

        >In the USA -lots- of people use SMS only, and it’s their main communication. You can do that on a dumb phone

        This is unique to the US (and probably Canada); elsewhere, everyone uses various chat apps to communicate.

        Regardless, if we just ignore everyplace else, the main problem I see here is that texting on a dumbphone is really painful once you're used to typing out messages on a modern smartphone's touchscreen. Sure, they had that T9 system back then, but compared to typing on a modern phone it's a huge step backwards in typing speed and usability. On top of that, the tiny screen size makes it much harder to follow a conversation.

    • [removed] 4 days ago
      [deleted]
  • whitehexagon 5 days ago

    Agreed. Only stupid thing is that my dumb phone comes with fb that cannot be deleted, but I have no data-plan. Oh and some games that apparently auto-bill your phone account if you start using them, also cannot be deleted. Still it was the best tech purchase in a long time under 100e for quality of life improvement, and helped me finally escape the depressing 'news/propaganda' streams.

    under 1000e: I am still experimenting with, but a water distiller and some glass bottles to try and escape the plastic water bottle madness.

  • doublepg23 5 days ago

    I think I like the “dumbify” apps better. You can install them on a regular smartphone and make it a bad experience for doom scrolling but still have conveniences like MFA apps, Password Managers, audio books, music streaming, etc. that are hard to come by on true dumb phones.

  • sotix 5 days ago

    I switched to an iPad plus cellular Apple Watch, and I’m finding it more convenient than a straight up dumb phone. Biggest downside is no ride share apps work on it, but otherwise it has everything I need.

  • idontwantthis 5 days ago

    I’m thinking about getting a cellular apple watch and not carrying around a phone most of the time. Can still get critical messages without being able to check the news when I’m bored or anxious.

    • Always42 5 days ago

      i did this for some time. I'm probably due to again as I check my phone often. Apple watch does have standalone navigation which is a win. It got annoying not being able to do things sometimes, such as checking a groupme etc.

  • beryilma 5 days ago

    What are the dumb phone options in the US? I want to get one.

    • caseyy 5 days ago

      Sunbeam is a popular one. Also a bunch of Nokias should work.

      There is also the Xiaomi/Qin/Duoqin F30. It’s a T9 phone with Android 11. But the “Westernized” version with Google Play Store has tampered with software (hacks applied) as the original Chinese software doesn’t have Google stuff nor is the phone Play verified. Then there are questions about the Chinese software itself. I’ve gone deep into the rabbit hole of trying to verify it’s secure but couldn’t to a satisfactory standard.

      The F30 is still considered a dumbphone for how limiting the T9 keyboard and its tiny screen are. You won’t enjoy consuming or searching for any kind of content on it. But you can install many modern Android apps if you are comfortable with the security situation. And that’s quite important sometimes to not get isolated from people, to bank, for 2FA, streaming music, and a few other things. It’s basically then a capable but highly inconvenient phone, which I think is excellent.

      Still, if you want privacy and security, how many days are you willing to sink into tinkering with these Xiaomi/Qin/Duoqin devices? You will need at least a few, possibly more.

      It’s much less hassle to just get whatever dumb phone with a feature OS you can get on Amazon or Walmart.

  • memset 5 days ago

    I think about this a lot! How did you overcome the compulsion? I quickly revert when I try to ween off any tech.

    What do you do instead?

    • al_borland 4 days ago

      Delete the stuff you’re compulsively checking. Turn off notifications, so you need to make the intention to check things, rather than the phone calling for attention. Spend some time now trying to ween, but going told turkey. Go for a walk, leaving the phone at home. Leave it in another room when doing things around the house. Don’t take it with you into the bathroom. Get comfortable with boredom. Allow your mind to wander and see where it takes you.

      Cal Newport’s book Digital Minimalism is pretty good for stressing the importance of spending time in thought without the influence of the internet, podcasts, audiobooks, or anything else. This used to be the norm for large sections of the day for people… now it’s rather rare.

    • caseyy 5 days ago

      That’s why it’s important to have tech that serves you, like a dumbphone. You throw your smartphone away (leave it in your car, leave it at work, throw it in the deep end of your attic, etc), make it really inconvenient to act in these compulsions.

      And then you just suffer through it for a few days. It gets better very quickly.

    • shepherdjerred 5 days ago

      I wrote about my approach here: https://sjer.red/blog/2023/screen-time/

      • caseyy 5 days ago

        That’s a nice compendium of methods. I tried almost all of them, they all work to an extent.

        I now use a smartphone again, as practicalities of life demand it. But I am switching to an old sluggish iPhone with a 4.X inch screen to hopefully put frictions in my use of it. I will see if that helps.

        You can disable Safari in iOS. Search for “Content & Privacy Restrictions” in Settings. Then turn Safari off in “Allowed Apps & Features”. The app will disappear after a few minutes.

        You can also turn off the Fitness app this way, even if you have an Apple Watch, and Car Play if you don’t like it for some reason, such as your car auto-connecting.

    • wonger_ 5 days ago

      Remember to replace the bad habit with new activities, filling the void

  • el_benhameen 5 days ago

    Mind sharing the one you bought?

    • caseyy 5 days ago

      I bought a rare one that I needed for a very specific reason. It was difficult to get it imported.

      Try one of the mainstream ones. There is a dumbphone finder website online to see what’s generally available, though no such website is exhaustive.

richardjs 5 days ago

Under $1000:

Voice lessons at the local community school of music. I'm a lifelong musician, but was an almost entirely solitary one. I taught myself different instruments, but I never felt like I could get to basic competency teaching myself to sing. I decided to spend ~$200 for a semester of weekly 30 minute lessons. (The community school cooperates with the local university to offer lessons taught by university students for a low rate.)

My singing improved (more work is needed), but the life-changing thing was getting involved with the local music community. It turns out they have a shortage of piano teachers--I had mistakenly assumed there would be plenty in my town! So I started teaching piano, which had long been a dream of mine. The school also connected me to local performance opportunities that are now a part of my regular music routine. And ultimately, the experience encouraged me to enroll as a (part-time) music student at the university, which itself has been extremely enriching and a tremendously positive community experience.

  • quard8 5 days ago

    If I have a horrible voice for singing, do you recommend voice lessons? Just for karaoke and fun.

    • prewett 5 days ago

      Not the parent, but I would definitely recommend it. A lot of voice quality has to how you pronounce vowels and where you place the resonance in your mouth. Also, avoiding singing through your nose (hold your nose closed and if there's pressure, then don't sing that way). There are vocal exercises for all of those, as well as exercises for breath support, singing in tune, phrasing, etc.

    • dottjt 3 days ago

      I think you should pursue anything you're interested in.

      I don't have the best singing voice, but after a few years of learning how to sing, it's like I finally "get it". It used to be this very mystical thing, but now I realise how to use my body to sing properly.

    • richardjs 5 days ago

      If you'd like to improve, definitely! There are all sorts of things involved in singing that some do naturally and others (like myself) do not. Having a knowledgeable teacher who's able to observe you, identify areas of improvement, and help you progress is really beneficial. There's a whole lot of "not knowing what you don't know" at play.

      Plus singing is a pretty personal way of making music, and there can be a lot of social fear of doing it badly. Formally studying it can help with getting over the psychological hump from self-identifying as "someone who is attempting to sing" to "singer".

    • laurieg 5 days ago

      I would temper your expectations. Singing lessons will improve your singing faster than practicing alone but it still may take years and years to develop.

      I had always enjoyed singing and I started singing and piano lessons at the same time. With consistent practice you can improve at the piano, learn more complex pieces and see your progress. With singing the process is a lot more mysterious. You probably don't understand the things that are going on inside your body very well and the teacher can't just say "Try putting your first finger on this key and your middle finger on this key".

      After three years I could play reasonably complicated pop songs on the piano and read chords. I'm still a few steps the average "someone who likes to sing level".

jareds 5 days ago

Under $100 Wireless cooking thermometer https://store-us.meater.com/products/meater-plus Since I'm blind this allows me to cook with out worrying I'll eat under cooked food. Under $1000 Meta Ray-ban glasses. https://www.ray-ban.com/usa/ray-ban-meta-smart-glasses I find using them as headphones to be a better option then transparency mode when using my phone. The Meta AI is also pretty good at recognizing flavors of bottles and types of food in packaging.

  • askvictor 5 days ago

    Even for people with good eyesight, an instant read thermometer is a game changer. Completely takes the guesswork out of cooking meat perfectly, also excellent for cakes, potatoes, and more. There are very decent ones for less that $20.

    • sn9 5 days ago

      I would add an immersion circulator to cook food sous vide as similarly impactful here, though getting a good thermometer is more necessary.

      It's made meal prepping incredibly easy and food is always perfectly cooked. You never have to eat a dry or overcooked piece of meat again.

      • jareds 5 days ago

        I have one of those but don't use it that often. I tend to cook burgers which work better on the grill. While I could cook sausage with it it's easier to do it on the grill to get a char. I do like it for chicken and stake though.

      • askvictor 5 days ago

        Agree; though I've gone for an instant pot with a sous vide mode. Temperature controlled cooking is something of a revolution.

    • jareds 5 days ago

      The advantage of this one is that I know it works with an app on my phone. ALso it's my understanding that instant read ones can't stay in the food while it cooks? This one can handle temperatures over 500 degrees farenheight.

      • askvictor 5 days ago

        For oven cooking I have one with a probe and a display that's outside the oven; though I rarely use that, and just open the oven and stick the instant-read. I can't say I have any interest in stuffing around with my phone while I'm cooking.

  • Izkata 3 days ago

    Related to this, I bought an oven thermometer a while ago - turns out my oven claims it's done pre-heating about 15 minutes before it actually reaches the target temperature. And it's a pretty new oven so this isn't an age thing. Food has come out more consistent since I've started giving it more pre-heating time.

  • theossuary 2 days ago

    Recommend combustion.inc, their app is the best and they're opening up the Bluetooth based protocol they use for their hardware

DarmokJalad1701 5 days ago

Under 1000:

- Robot vacuum (with mapping+LIDAR): Major game changer. I should have bought this years ago! The tech is now good enough that it basically never gets stuck unless you leave cables lying on the floor. It costs about as much as it would to hire a cleaning crew for a day. And this will do clean your house every single day!

- Bidet Seat (Heated)

- Chest freezer: Unlike the anti-car people on Reddit, I don't consider grocery shopping to be something I want to do every day. I can now get by with 1-2 trips for a whole month for two people. It also helps reduce food wastage once you figure out how to freeze your commonly used perishables that take too long to use up (e.g. heavy cream "ice cubes", frozen bread loaves etc.)

- Noise cancelling headphones (Sony XMs): I use them everyday and love the distraction free environment it creates (combine with MyNoise.net at work).

Under 100:

- Immersion blender: surprisingly versatile. The "barrier to entry" is smaller especially since it is super easy to clean compared to a blender (chuck it in the dish-washer).

- Electric toothbrush (granted it could be slightly over 100 for the one I got)

  • PotatoPancakes 5 days ago

    I want to second the recommendation of MyNoise.net. It's phenomenal. Especially at work, it's perfect for getting in the zone. I pay for it even though I mostly stick to the free ones.

    If you're working at a computer, I recommend opening multiple tabs at the same time. For example, one with some relaxing white noise, one with a music-adjacent one like Mr Rhodes or 88 Keys, and maybe also a crackling fire for cozy vibes.

    - https://mynoise.net/noiseMachines.php My favorites are: "Stormy Weather", "Fireplace", "Irish coast", "88 Keys", and "Mr. Rhodes"

    You can also find myNoise sounds on YouTube and Spotify:

    - https://www.youtube.com/@myNoiseDotNet/videos

    - https://open.spotify.com/artist/1gRJBUyCeihBrgcCtDdEfv

    • sedawk 5 days ago

      I have recently discovered a combo of white-noise + music, but I must tell you crackling fire noise makes me too relaxed, making me feel I need a quick nap! Rainfall sound works better for me :-)

      Haven't come across myNosie before, will check it out, thank you for sharing!

  • high_byte 5 days ago

    I love my Sony XMs. I only ever use the noise cancelling on flights and I don't even use the bluetooth. just plugged and I love them.

  • wonger_ 5 days ago

    Electric toothbrush on the list? And possibly over $100?

    What benefits have you experienced? Just curious, asking as a lifelong boring toothbrush user.

    • aswerty 5 days ago

      I was always a bit put off by electric tooth brushes since the idea of having another "noisy" device was something I DID NOT WANT.

      But after seeing so many recommendations from friends, family, dentists and online over the years. I felt buying one was worth a go.

      And I am never going back. The quality of the clean and the massaging of the gums brought me from brushing my teeth as a chore to having a desire to brush my teeth (which I had never understood before).

    • yen223 5 days ago

      Electric toothbrushes clean a lot better than hand-cranked toothbrushes

      • Kailhus 5 days ago

        And don’t mess with your gums as much as. Learnt my lessons after having the pain of my life due to receding gums, switch with sensitive toothpaste and it’s much better now but they never really fully heal. Take care of your gums people!

    • arrakark 5 days ago

      I've tried OralB's $120 toothbrush, and their cheapest $30 Pro 300. Functionally, they are almost exactly the same!

      • drcongo 5 days ago

        Same, I replaced mine with a Suri a few months ago because while brushing my teeth I can't help thinking about the amount of plastic waste Oral B and regular toothbrushes produce. I love the Suri - https://www.trysuri.com

        • stefandesu 5 days ago

          I've been using my Suri toothbrush for about 2 1/2 years I think (I had one on preorder before it came out). It's nice, compact, brushes well (according to my recent dentist visit), great battery life (usually over a month of twice per day brushing), and great USB-C charging case (that's the best part IMO).

          What I don't like:

          - Automatically turns off after 4x 30 seconds - I usually need a little more time than that.

          - Proprietary replacements heads - I'm worried that they'll go out of business and I won't be able to get replacement heads anymore. (I could buy them in bulk now, but what if the toothbrush itself breaks and I can't get a new one?)

    • keiferski 5 days ago

      Dentists pretty much universally recommend electronic toothbrushes, in my experience.

      • leononame 5 days ago

        Interesting, the dentists I have asked (4) all said it doesn't matter (Spain and Germany, maybe it's relevant) at all and it's up to personal preference.

      • blitzar 5 days ago

        More doctors smoke Camels than any other cigarette.

  • fuzztester a day ago

    Speaking of cleaning your teeth, has anyone used the Waterpik device? A dentist recommended it to me some time ago, but I could not find one online then.

  • EasyMark 4 days ago

    As far as the electric toothbrush all you need is a $30 braun with a 2 minute timer (30+30+30+30 seconds in each quarter of your mouth) and you will be fine. I haven’t had a cavity or issue in the 15 years since I switched, brush twice a day, switch to nano hydroxyapatite for extra credit.

  • fuzztester a day ago

    >frozen bread loaves

    Don't the loaves get soggy when you thaw them out?

  • selimthegrim 5 days ago

    I guess I’m stuck with the immersion blender with the attached cord, which makes the dishwasher impossible

    • HeyLaughingBoy 5 days ago

      I used to have a Braun. I would just immerse it in hot soapy water and turn it on for a few seconds. Occasionally it would need a bit of a scrub.

    • DarmokJalad1701 5 days ago

      Mine also has a cord but the shaft/head is removable. I sort of assumed that that was the norm. It was some random "chinesium" brand from Amazon that cost $12. Works great so far!

  • dzhiurgis 5 days ago

    Second on robot vacuum. Mine is half price than my stick vacuum AND you don't need to do anything. It's no brainer provided you have the right house.

  • idk1 3 days ago

    Which Robot Vacuum do you recommend?

  • Hikikomori 4 days ago

    You can freeze bread?

    • benhurmarcel 4 days ago

      Yes but not very long, otherwise it gets dry. But it allows to keep it for a couple of weeks instead of a single day.

    • slater 4 days ago

      Yep!

      • kortilla 4 days ago

        The ice crystals do change the texture though. Depending on the type of bread and how you’re using it, frozen bread can be very obvious

manmal 5 days ago

Under $100: A used Instantpot, ideally the Duo Crisp if you can get one. The normal one can also make yogurt though, which might also be interesting. The great thing about these is that you don’t need to babysit them. Have a call or wanna go for a walk, and then eat? Just turn it on and come back anytime after it’s done. It will keep food warm until you turn it off. Bonus tip: Buy two and/or an air fryer to get more options, eg veggies in one and protein in the other.

Under $100 #2: Get a CGM for two weeks and find out what foods spike your blood sugar the most. Or what supplements can help keep it steady (eg vitamin B1, inositol, or Chromium). Say goodbye to food coma and likely improve your long term health.

Under $1000: Get a second freezer. From that point on you can buy frozen veggies etc during sales, and prep meals during the weekend, for the whole week. I don’t know how we got by with just one tiny freezer section in the fridge.

  • red-iron-pine 5 days ago

    +1 for second freezer. got a chest freezer essentially for free when a friend was moving. was ancient but couldn't go back and upgraded to something that wasn't from the 80s during COVID.

    lots of meal prep, makes doing one big Costco run a month work well, and actually gave us an incentive to do lots of gardening, since it got easy to do a little processing and then throw the stuff in the fridge.

  • supahfly_remix 5 days ago

    > Get a CGM for two weeks and find out what foods spike your blood sugar the most

    Are you in the US, and is it possible to obtain a CGM without a prescription?

    • hangonhn 5 days ago

      Yes! Abbott Lingo (iPhone only for now) and Dexcom Stelo. They go for about $45 per sensor that last for 2 weeks.

      I second the OP's suggestion. It's completely changed my eating habits.

      • voisin 5 days ago

        How does the Stelo compare to the G7?

        Do you have any tips for how to start with one and systematically get the most insight out of it?

    • laweijfmvo 5 days ago

      Dexcom Stelo is $100 for two, OTC

      • voisin 5 days ago

        I asked in a sibling comment but thought I’d ask here too: how does the Stelo compare to the G7? And do you have any advice on how to start with one and systematically get the best insight out of it?

        • laweijfmvo 3 days ago

          I can’t comment on the differences between the models.

          As far as using it, you’ll fall into one of two camps

          1. You put it on and go about your normal life. You might discover some unexpected foods that spike your blood sugar, etc.

          2. You put it on, but you basically already know what’s going on. So you end up course correcting your diet to avoid seeing something bad. You should not buy a CGM :)

          I was in the second group, although I learned that blood sugar can actually spike during _intense_ exercise, as your body releases glucose to fuel you.

  • ralphc 5 days ago

    What were your food comas were before, and how have they improved? What supplements work for you?

    • manmal 5 days ago

      I don’t understand your q around food comas completely, but yes they have improved. I take all the supplements I mentioned

Octplane 5 days ago

(lovely thread!)

Under $100

- Ember Mug, same as many folks here: 4 years of service, 2 use of their customer service, bought another one for my wife. 100% will reshop when my current mug stop working or is not replaced anymore by their amazing support.

- A memory foam pillow: Had to iterate to find the right one, but once you've it, you know it. You sleep better, less pain in the back/neck/shoulder

- A vasectomy: just taking charge of the contraception in my couple. Simple, painless and effective.

Under $1000

- A gym coach coming once a week to kick my ass and make me sweat. My best investment in nearly 10 years. I've never been so fit and in shape in my life. He's there every week, even when you really don't want to do anything and afterwards, you'll always feel better

- Airpods Pro, I use them between 2 and 6 hours a day and they've become my second pair of ears. I use them often in transparency mode to avoid screaming during meetings and when it's quiet around, it's perfect.

- A standing desk and its screen arm. I use it every day, and sometimes in upper position (yay!)

Over $1000

- A Babboe Curve e-bike to carry my kids to school. 2000km later, it's still an amazing device to move almost all the family without any of the car's downside (yes, I live somewhere in France)

  • chatmasta 5 days ago

    For under $50 you can get “shredded memory foam” which IMO is even better than full memory foam. It’s basically recycled memory foam, shredded and stuffed into a pillow case. You can remove some of it to get the right level of firmness.

  • Dazzler5648 5 days ago

    The vasectomy gives you God status IMO, and dang, for cheap!

    • dyauspitr 5 days ago

      Why? If I’m having sex with my wife she can just take birth control and if I’m single and sleeping around I have to use protection anyways.

      • sn9 4 days ago

        If you've decided you don't want any (more) kids in the future, a vasectomy is the easiest way to insure that with the least likely side effects for anyone.

        Why would you force your wife to be subjected to the side effects of birth control if you can get a simple out-patient procedure?

      • nixosbestos 5 days ago

        Oh I don't know. Go read a single article about women's birth control and the extreme effects it has in a woman's body and often personality? Also, self empowerment? Also, casual sex and condom use is notoriously not perfect. Curing many STDs is easier than, again, the larger burden that women carry when contraception fails.

  • kulahan a day ago

    …a vasectomy is under $100? That is absolutely mind blowing. What other surgery is that cheap???

  • frenchman_in_ny 4 days ago

    Just FYI on the Babboe line of bikes, be aware that there was a recall [0] on some them recently! (And I say this as a Babboe owner myself)

    [0] https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2024/Cargo-Bicycles-Recalled-Du...

    • Octplane 4 days ago

      Yeah, we saw the conundrum and went through the inspection and all, and our bike's fit for biking! At that price... well, we earlier hoped it would be recalled and we would buy a competitor's version. But now everything is green, we're back on the road...

  • tdeck 5 days ago

    The ember mug is great; I got one as a swag item and thought it was silly, but ended up using it every day. Sadly the ember mug is now much more than $100, and the coaster on mine has broken twice, so I just gave up on it. One of these days I will solder on new pogo pins.

    • roland35 4 days ago

      How long does it take you to normally drink a mug? I've been interested in it but I find that I tend to drink a coffee quickly before it gets too cold, and with tea I actually enjoy the change in taste as it cools

      • tdeck 4 days ago

        It greatly depends on how focused I am on what I'm doing. But if I am working on something for 20+ minutes without taking a drink, it can be nice to reach over and still have some tea at the perfect temperature.

  • [removed] 5 days ago
    [deleted]
  • idk1 3 days ago

    If you got the vasectomy ealier you could have saved ~$1000 on the Babboe Curve e-bike. :)

alumic 5 days ago

Finally bought a rice cooker 6 months ago. No idea why I hadn’t done it sooner. Perfect rice every single time. I believe that qualifies.

Edit: I also bought an emergency jumpstart battery for my car. Saved me twice when my battery suddenly started having issues. Went from feeling “stuck” to back on the road in under 2 minutes.

  • slake 3 days ago

    I'm wondering, If I bought an emergency jumpstart battery for my car. Can I run on a failing battery for a lot longer if I just jumpstart it every time I start the car? Usually the highest current draw is for the starting right. Post that it runs just on engine generated power?

  • Cyph0n 5 days ago

    +1 to both. If you want more consistent rice, invest in a fuzzy logic rice cooker ($150-$300).

    • etrautmann 5 days ago

      +1 to the Zojirushi neuro fuzzy. It's an unbelievably good product - I've sold four friends on it and nobody has been disappointed. They go on sale for 180 routinely

    • _boffin_ 5 days ago

      I find this comment funny. Go to your local grocery store and pick a rice cooker up for $15 and just add the rice and eyeball the water.

      …that much for a rice cooker—that’s nuts!

      • Cyph0n 5 days ago

        If you’re just starting out, then sure.

        But if you cook a lot of rice, it’s a noticeable step up in both quality and consistency. They are extremely common in Japan afaik.

        • lemme_tell_ya 5 days ago

          We've used our Zojirushi almost every single day for almost 5 years now. It cooks perfect rice and keeps it warm and fresh for 12 hours. 100% worth the investment.

      • tdeck 5 days ago

        The thing they don't tell you about the expensive rice cookers is that they take 40 minutes to make rice, while the cheap ones make it in 20. To me it's not worth planning my day around having "perfect" rice, so I still use a cheap one every day :/.

      • rjh29 5 days ago

        Almost every family in Japan has an expensive rice cooker. They eat rice 2-3 times a day so I trust them. The end result is a lot better, and water is too important to be eyeballed.

  • riku_iki 5 days ago

    is instant pot much more versatile device?

    • pajamasam 5 days ago

      I haven't been able to figure out how not to burn my rice in an Instant Pot.

      • ElSucioDan 3 days ago

        Took me a while but finally found a consistent way to get it perfect. I use long grain enriched white rice from Costco, wash the excess starch and dump the same amount of rice and water in the pot and let it cook on high for 4 minutes then 10 in low

smeej 5 days ago

Under $1,000, but just barely over $100:

Semi-recumbent stationary bike that fits under my standing desk.

I've never been coordinated enough to get the hang of walking on the treadmill and typing, but pedaling slowly all day I can do! I've lost 45 lbs so far this year, and adding up the calorie estimate for each day (I've been tracking) and dividing by the 3500 calories people say are in a pound, about 20 of them have been from the bike! (The rest have been from hard work with a dietitian who helped me solve some longstanding issues, but that was more expensive.)

  • voisin 5 days ago

    What bike did you get?

    > The rest have been from hard work with a dietitian who helped me solve some longstanding issues

    Deficiencies or simply realizing certain intake was higher calories than expected?

    • smeej 5 days ago

      This one: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0789F4Z2M

      The $122 price is about what I paid for it. Dunno when they have ever actually sold it for $350

      And what I solved with the dietitian that led to weight loss had more to do with blood sugar balance and what I do and don't react badly to. Cutting out stuff that keeps me inflamed made a big difference as far as actually getting the nutrients from my food and not being hungry all the time. So did a target set of 40g protein, 40g fat, 10g fiber every meal, which brings me in around 1900 calories per day. The nice thing was that at first, that was a 500 calorie deficit per day, but I don't have to recalculate ever, because it's also the maintenance calorie intake for my target weight. Weight comes off slower the closer I get, but I don't really care about speed, just trajectory!

      My IBD (some dispute among my doctors whether it was UC or Chrohn's) is now confirmed in remission without medication, which is terrific!

  • echoangle 5 days ago

    Interesting, do you have that thing at home? Or do you work at an office and have it there? I don’t really know how I would do that myself.

    • smeej 5 days ago

      It's at home. I already had an adjustable-height desk behind my sofa (unusual setup, but it works great in my space), but like I said, not that coordinated.

      I've only worked remotely since way before covid, so it works out for my situation.

  • mbrameld 5 days ago

    > (The rest have been from hard work with a dietitian who helped me solve some longstanding issues, but that was more expensive.)

    Just a heads up, if you're in the USA I believe all health insurance plans must fully cover dietitian visits if you have certain conditions, obesity being one of them. Hypertension and pre-diabetes are a couple other common ones.

    • smeej 5 days ago

      Yeah, they have to cover at least some generic ones. They don't have to cover every weird little specialty.

      Now that I'm in more of a maintenance mode, I'm working with one who's in-network and free. It just cost more than $1k to get to this point.

  • fiftyacorn 5 days ago

    Ive got a yoyo bike desk - love it. Being able to pedal an hour or 2 while working

    I just wish it had ant+ support - i keep thinking of adding a cadence meter then calibrate it to a .fit file. but then never have the time

sotix 5 days ago

Under $1000: A Playdate[0] for $200! It got me to finally make a game[1], which is the entire reason I got into programming yet kept putting off. The restrictions of actual hardware with a slow processor, 1 bit graphics, and 16MB of RAM forced me to scale down the decisions that gave me paralysis previously and prevented me from making anything substantial.

Plus other people’s games are downright fun to play, and it’s probably the most fun I’ve had since the Nintendo DS.

[0]: https://play.date/

[1]: https://sotix.itch.io/plight-of-the-wizard

technothrasher 5 days ago

In 2020, I bought an old broken clock on eBay for $60 on a lark. I wanted to tinker with something and see if I could figure out how it works.

Since that time, I spent literally thousands of hours immersed in horology. Everything from clock repair where I started, to learning how to use a lathe and a mill, studying the impact of clockmaking on the industrial revolution in early America and the history of maritime navigation, building an atomic NTP server from a rubidium engine bought off eBay and a raspberry Pi, becoming friends with several of the Antique Roadshow experts, volunteering to help build a pollinator meadow at a small clock museum nearby…

It’s amazing to me how much of an effect that little junky impulse buy had on how I’m living my life these days.

  • threeio 5 days ago

    Say you a member of the time-nuts mailing list without saying your a member of the time-nuts mailing list ;)

  • sahmeepee 5 days ago

    You thought you spent thousands of hours, but then your clock is broken so maybe not!

    • technothrasher 5 days ago

      I know you're joking, but actually, that is true. That original clock never got fixed. I damaged and lost enough parts that I'd have to fabricate too much for it to be worthwhile, and I have plenty of more interesting clocks to work on now.

  • andrewstuart 5 days ago

    Careful, many vintage clocks are radioactive.

    • technothrasher 5 days ago

      I haven't done any work with radium dialed clocks and/or watches... yet.

      • andrewstuart 5 days ago

        A friend of mine had many hundreds of vintage clocks and he filled his bedroom with them on shelves and put his bed in the middle.

        Until I pointed out they were radioactive.

        • technothrasher 5 days ago

          I've got mostly antiques at my house, 1750-1880. Not a ton of vintage 20th century stuff that would have radium. I was looking a bit ago at the old W. M. Gilbert Clock Company factory building in Connecticut that was for sale (not actually to buy, just thought it was interesting) and the biggest issue for whoever was going to be the buyer was that it was quite contaminated from the radium dial painting they did there in the 1930's.

foolz 5 days ago

<$100: "Qudelix 5K Bluetooth DAC" Allows you to connect a pair of headphones to an audio source via Bluetooth using high quality (near lossless) codecs (also works as a USB DAC when needed). The killer feature is an onboard Parametric EQ with the ability to save profiles on the device. No more trying to manage EQ profiles on all my devices for my various headphones.

<$1000: I bought a digital piano to learn to play music. I feel that learning an instrument has had an enormous effect on my life. It's great for getting those synapses going, and find it very relaxing to play after a hard day.

  • aitchnyu 5 days ago

    Ill pay the nearly 3x markup in India just for its db meter. I enter the headphone impedance and sensitivity (dB/mW) and it shows the real time (estimated) volume. Also I converted the frequency response to V-shape so my open back headphones sounds good at lower volumnes. I moved from "25 hours a week" volume levels to "168 hours a week".

    • camgunz 5 days ago

      I would guess most people who listen to music while they work have the volume way too far up for that amount of exposure. Anyone on an iPhone should go into Sounds -> Headphone Safety and reduce loud audio to 75 dB. You'll probably be shocked by how quiet that is.

      • FireBeyond 4 days ago

        I wonder how they determine that? Especially with Bluetooth, you have no idea how much sound energy is being put out, and can't infer it from power draw or anything similar.

madamelic 5 days ago

Under $100:

- Ember mug

  - Why: lets me drink tea because I hate cold tea. Bleck.
Under $1000:

- 49" ultra-wide monitor to replace my dual monitor

  - Why: I use i3-wm. It works fantastically on it.
- 5.1 Soundbar for computer

  - Why: I don't have to wear headphones constantly and also sound quality is so much better
- Mount 50" TV above my desk

  - Why: Allows others to hang out in my office with me while I work / play games. Additionally, it allows me to turn something on without interrupting my monitor space.
---

Breaking the rules:

Over $1000:

- EightSleep

  - Why: Huge huge huge change in sleep quality plus it's really nice to be able to choose whether to get into a crisp, cold bed or a warm, toasty bed. The Autopilot stuff is interesting and does seem to work to keep you asleep but sometimes it can cause you to wake up especially in the transitional periods of the year (spring and fall).
  • DarmokJalad1701 5 days ago

    > - EightSleep

    I would agree. Except that now they seem to make it so that it is pretty pointless without a subscription. Kind of sucks that you have to pay $15/month to actually use the product after paying close to $2000 for the product.

    I still use mine only because I was grandfathered in to be able to set temperature set-points without a subscription.

    If I were to need another one, I would look for an option without a subscription.

    • k4rli 5 days ago

      That's just insane. And it's not a subscription you can ever stop paying unless you get rid of the 5000EUR bed itself. Absolutely a dealbreaker.

      What if they increase the fee to 30EUR a month? Or 50EUR a month? That's guaranteed to happen once main product sales start slowing down and investors still want their quarterly gains.

    • madamelic 5 days ago

      Yeah, am getting a little worried about that.

      I am kind of waiting for the other shoe to drop because the company has been nothing but amazing when it comes to their support. It has sprung a leak three times, about once every 18 months, and they've always replaced it with no additional payment.

      I have a feeling next time it's going to involve a lot of cash being exchanged and I'll be faced with a choice.

      ---

      The subscription thing is very much a bummer. I hadn't figured out why they weren't shaking me down for it until I also put together the grandfathered in thing. It is extremely distasteful to have a required (?) subscription on a product that is this expensive.

      I don't entirely get how spending $2k - $5k on a bed system (not a mattress!) isn't enough. Just pure fuckin' greed if I am being honest.

      I get they need to make money and their product isn't a monthly or yearly re-purchase but it's just short-sighted.

      Like let's be real honest here: their product almost certainly doesn't cost anywhere near $5k in materials. The margins on their product are likely already completely stupid. My guess-timate would be maybe $500 in parts. It's literally just a pump that heats or cools water that is app-controlled... not exactly anything crazy. If you look at something like Withings sleep tracker, it's $130 so even the fancy pants sleep tracking stuff isn't some crazy tech even if we take Withings' margins as the actual price.

  • chrisweekly 5 days ago

    (also breaking rules to concur)

    EightSleep mattress cover is a GAME-CHANGER. Precise control over preferred temp, and detailed/accurate logging of sleep metrics == way better sleep, and knowledge of its relative quality (metrics for which let me measure the impact of different variables).

    • SentientOctopus 5 days ago

      Never heard of them, temperature control sounds amazing. How is this product from a privacy perspective? Is the data kept local or is it some cloud service that tracks all metrics?

      • Dansvidania 5 days ago

        Not sure about the privacy but afaik you can’t use the thing without the app and being connected to the internet. That was a dealbreaker for me

    • idontwantthis 5 days ago

      How do they work thermodynamically? It should make the room hotter, but I guess you don’t notice because the surface you are touching gets colder? Is it a closed loop heat exchanger or is it evaporative?

    • askvictor 5 days ago

      Is it _that_ much better than a wifi-controlled two-zone electric blanket?

      • chrisweekly 5 days ago

        I've never tried a cooling electric blanket. My wife has struggled w insomnia for a long time, and the eightsleep tracking was almost as much a draw as the cooling.

        • askvictor 5 days ago

          This does cooling too? OK, I didn't realise that. I can see how that might be useful

  • freefaler 5 days ago

    For hot drinks (teas, coffee & etc) I prefer a simple 0.7l thermos and small chinese teacup. Put the hot stuff in the thermos it will stay hot for at least 6 hours, put a bit of the hot stuff in the cup, since it's small it will get to a comfortable level of hotness in 30 seconds. Drink it slowly and refill. |

    Works in the park/library too and you only heat the water once and don't need electricity to keep it hot!

  • covercash 5 days ago

    A cheaper alternative to EightSleep is Sleep.Me… same concept with a heated/cooled water circulator + mattress pad, and they have an “autopilot” add on. I just manually set my temp schedules based on the season since I don’t like subscriptions for stuff like that, and I don’t want my sleep data on their servers.

  • fellowniusmonk 5 days ago

    I've purchased two ember mugs over the years and end up not using them, a thin double walled glass mug paired with an always on water boiler has been amazing. A kettle is great in Europe because they boil so fast but in the US a boiler is the way to go.

  • foresto 5 days ago

    > 5.1 Soundbar

    5.1 typically means surround sound, but a sound bar (as I know it) sits in front of the listener. How does yours do both?

    • o11c 5 days ago

      I imagine most soundbars cheat since consumer protection is dead, but they're still better (and more convenient) than two simple speakers.

    • idontwantthis 5 days ago

      They use feedback microphones to tune the output to bounce off of the walls. Or at least that’s what they claim.

  • mikestew 5 days ago

    I see that the cheapest Ember is now $130. My first-gen is about six years old, and the battery is about shot. I hesitate to drop another $150-ish on a new mug, but OTOH, is consistently hot coffee worth $25/year? Yeah, it probably is to me, so I'm going to have to suck it up soon.

    • pammf 5 days ago

      You can buy only a replacement mug (without coaster/charger). Also, get in contact with customer support mentioning the battery, they usually offer a discount code.

      • mikestew 5 days ago

        Thanks, I’ll try customer support and see how it goes.

        • Octplane 5 days ago

          I had to deal twice with them: coaster stopped working 2 years ago and more recently paint inside the cup came out. Both time, they replaced the broken part at no cost. Probably the first time in my life I'm using and happily recommending customer support of any kind.

    • madamelic 5 days ago

      Oh, I wasn't even aware they were that much. I could've sworn they were like $70 - $90 last I saw.

      That sucks.

      • azundo 5 days ago

        They're often much cheaper at Costco if that's an option and you don't care about a specific color. They are a complete game changer though, especially if you're a new parent.

        • mikestew 5 days ago

          Thanks for the tip, I’m seeing them for $99 right now. Any color you want, assuming you want stainless steel.

      • mikestew 5 days ago

        Im pretty sure they used to be less money, as I don’t think I’d pay $130 sight-unseen. But now that I have one…

      • jareds 5 days ago

        I'm pretty sure the one I got was $99 but that was a black Friday deal on amazon.

      • dotmanish 5 days ago

        different sizes. The black-10oz is still $91 at Amazon right now. Price goes upwards for other colors and other size (14oz).

  • skizm 5 days ago

    Is there anything similar to 8sleep that doesn’t have all the bells and whistles and doesn’t require an app? I don’t care about any of the tracking or alarms or whatever else besides the temp control.

  • ashconnor 5 days ago

    I used to use a soundbar for my computer but the only way to control volume was 1. With the Bose remote that came with it 2. Bluetooth.

  • damidekronik 5 days ago

    Which 49" do you have? I am looking to improve my setup and wouldn't mind some suggestions.

patwolf 5 days ago

- double-edged safety razors. It blows my mind how much money is wasted on cartridges.

- Bidet - just a basic one that plugs into the existing water line. Everyone in my house makes fun of me for it, but after a year with it, using TP feels barbaric.

- Ninja Woodfire Outdoor Oven. There might be other brands that are just as good, but it's essentially a small electric oven I can use outdoors. I started baking small loaves of sourdough almost daily, and use it occasionally for pizza, chicken, or smoked meat. I'm reluctant to use the indoor oven (especially in summer) because it heats the house so much, plus I'm mindful of my electricity usage.

  • Clubber 5 days ago

    I second the double edged safety razors. I had to learn not to push down so hard like I have to do with the modern ones. Those things are SHARP! You get a closer shave too. I got the soap and horsehair brush to go with it. I bought a pack of blades that have lasted years.

MrMcCall 5 days ago

(< $1000 category)

Living in American public housing, we used our pandemic stimulus money to buy two RabbitAir MinusA2 HEPA air purifiers. At $600 each plus $95/yr (for filter change) they're utterly fantastic and the pre-HEPA stages are easily cleanable with a cheap air compressor and wet paper towels. The multi-stage filter system is quite quiet on level 3 (of 5) but will really blow at 5 and be nearly silent at 2. You can tell how well they work by how the filters build up over time. The build quality is top-shelf with exquisite tolerances.

I can't recommend them enough. In my travels, I learned my favorite aphorism, which comes from China, I believe:

>>> Pay a lot, cry once.

Our RabbitAir units are the finest example we can afford, easily our best quality-of-life investment.

  • alpaca128 5 days ago

    If you're into DIY it's possible to make a cheaper, more efficient and quieter air purifier than many consumer models. From what I understand the problem is that most devices on the market are designed to be small, which reduces the filter area and that again requires a stronger (louder & less efficient) fan. Going DIY also means no dependence on a specific brand's replacement filters.

    Then again that doesn't mean off-the-shelf products are bad, for a single room even quite cheap ones can do the job. And they don't look like a fan taped onto filters, so there's that.

  • plausibility 5 days ago

    The English language version of that saying rhymes better I think: > Buy once, cry once.

    I used to have a large Honeywell air purifier I special ordered to Australia that required a step down voltage transformer, it's really surprising how much better the air feels when it's truly clean.

  • istultus 5 days ago

    How have they improved quality of life? Asthma?

    • MrMcCall 5 days ago

      Thankfully, none of us has had asthma. As far as anecdata:

      The device does have a what-appears-to-be-accurate AQ (air quality) sensor on the side. In the presence of smoke, it turns red, cranks itself up, and then returns to blue (clearest) through purple over the course of some minutes. As such, I'd say that the "response curves" looked legit to my programmer brain, besides that the air certainly smells better.

      I can definitely say, however, that -- having replaced the filters three times over these four years -- the HEPA layer (the inmost) definitely got brownish. Each 3-6 month pre-filter cleaning cycle had nice gradations of dust and stuff after each cleaning, sometimes a great deal if we were slacking.

      Regardless, who knows what's been sucked into and blown through our ancient HVAC unit's ducts over these past decades, what with most people probably just buying the cheapest air filter possible? Why not err on the side of caution w/rt AQ?

      • derwiki 5 days ago

        Interesting point. I have $cheap brand air purifiers, and the filters never get that dirty—but we have radiant heating in the floors and no AC, so no ducts, so maybe that’s why?

    • Isomer 5 days ago

      I have allergies. I remember walking home from work one day thinking "Ah, my sinuses have cleared, the pollen must have finally gone." only to wake up the next morning all stuffed up again. Then it dawned upon me that work has HEPA filtered air, but my bedroom does not despite spending ~⅓ of my life there. Having an air purifier in my bedroom means I've avoided almost all symptoms of allergies for the last 5+ years without needing to resort to medication.

voisin 5 days ago

Under $100:

I think it’s $89/yr for Walmart grocery delivery. We were doing app orders + self-pickup, and the time savings of having them deliver for no added cost on every order over $35 has been amazing.

Under $1,000:

I bought an Olympic bar and plates from Facebook Marketplace ($250) and the Bells of Steel Light Commercial power cage ($700) from Amazon and started doing StrongLifts 5x5 consistently beginning in January of this year. It’s been nothing short of life changing. Having the safety of the cage, and the simplicity of StrongLifts really opened the door to strength and I would highly recommend it to anyone who, like me, didn’t know where or how to start.

  • kortilla 4 days ago

    >no added cost on every order over $35 has been amazing.

    You don’t tip?

purple-leafy 5 days ago

Under $1000:

- coffee machine: coffee has now become part of our morning routine (coffee dates) where we sit and talk over coffee with the dog in our laps. Play around with different beans and blends. Saves money, fun to clean.

- proton mail/pass: I now have a super private email, and I spin up aliases when I need to sign up for something. 400+ aliases later and I get less spam, that I can destroy instantly.

- Hoka walking shoes: I have debilitating arthritis (under 30YO) and could barely walk a kilometre. These shoes allow me to walk upto 5kms a day without much pain.

Under $100:

- fallout 4 on PC: modding this old game and playing it on survival mode has reinvigorated my passion for gaming, it’s also unlocked a new hobby in modding existing games.

- automate the boring stuff with Python: this book got me in to programming, a relatively lucrative career and lifestyle booster.

- Ritalin: I’ve gone my whole life without knowing I had ADHD. Taking medication for it has been a complete game changer in terms of happiness and ability to relax

  • mettamage 2 days ago

    What kind of stuff did you automate? I also automate stuff with chrome extensions (chrome extensions makes for easier personal scraping)

    • purple-leafy a day ago

      Nothing in the end, but I made a few chrome extensions to block ads etc

heywire 5 days ago

Under $100 - an electric head shaver.

I started balding in my mid 20’s, so I shaved my head with a BIC disposable and shaving cream. I kept up this routine for probably 15 years before seeing a curved electric razor made for heads advertised to me. I picked one up on a whim, and it has been great! It takes me around 1 minute each morning compared to 5-10 before, and I no longer have to worry about nicks. It uses about 1% battery each shave, so I only have to charge it every couple months. It truly has been a great quality of life improvement.

[1] the one I use is called the Hummingbird MK3, available on Amazon for around $60.

scruple 5 days ago

Under $100:

Gymnastics rings and straps. A Lebert Equalizer.

Under $1000:

A squat rack, barbell, iron plates and bumper plates. Adjustable bench, adjustable dumbbells. A collection of kettlebells.

I started taking my strength and body composition seriously in 2018. To that point, I had been a (ultra)marathoner for the previous decade. Prior to that, I was in the military and trained in a hybrid fashion. But I had gotten pretty out of shape between separating and picking up endurance events. But then I had neglected strength for such a long time.

Today I am stronger and with a better physique than I had over 20 years ago. I also have a resting heart rate that's in the mid-40s, while I myself am in the mid-40s. I lift 2-4 days per week, and I do conditioning 2-4 days per week. I cycle my training with the seasons, I'm currently moving into a more lifting focused phase of training as we move into and through the colder months. In the spring and summer, I focus more on endurance.

  • alecsm 4 days ago

    Gymnastics rings are one of the best things I've bought lately. I already had gym equipment at home but rings are something else.

    Once you try them you realize you're not strong enough and you have a lot to do. And I also feel the workout is different because it's me training on the rings, not me lifting something heavy. They are very versatile, you can do many exercises anywhere you want.

    • scruple 4 days ago

      My favorite piece of training equipment by far. I've spent 6-month training blocks with nothing but my gymnastics rings, a 24kg kettlebell and a 32kg kettlebell. At this point I honestly only ever go back to barbell training because I don't like pursuing any single modality for too long, but I firmly believe that if I had to I could live the rest of my life with just rings and a couple of kettlebells (and a pair of running shoes) and I would be perfectly content.

  • fiatpandas 4 days ago

    What do you do for endurance training?

    • scruple 4 days ago

      A lot. Mostly zone 2 running but also quite a bit of hill work and some rucking. An occasional mountain bike ride if/when friends ask and I can make it work. Some swimming in the summer. And I walk a lot, like 15k steps daily on top of the running.

      Specifically, I follow the Tactical Barbell hybrid training system. Most of my training these days can be lifted directly out of the Tactical Barbell Green Protocol book, but I also incorporate training from the original Tactical Barbell strength book, the conditioning book, the Mass Protocol book, and the Ageless Athlete book.

hairywalt 5 days ago

Under $100

- an ear bulb syringe

I get blocked ears due to wax and it's really negatively impactful to conversation etc. Plus they would block when flying/swimming which ruined a few holidays. I used to go to my local (UK) GP which was very inconvenient due to appointment timings etc.

Then somebody recommended buying a bulb syringe for self-treatment. Mine cost about £4 and has been totally game changing.

I can sort myself out whenever and wherever I want. If you suffer the same, get yourself one immediately!

  • Retr0id 5 days ago

    This is adjacent to what I was going to comment, which is a camera for looking inside my own ears. My ears frequently got blocked and/or itchy, and I was almost addicted to sticking qtips in to try to relieve things. There are good reasons they say not to do that! I always felt like there was wax I wasn't quite able to reach, and in trying to do so I only made things worse, often causing inflammation.

    The camera cost about £10 and came with a few plastic "scraper" tools (feel kinda gross to say it, heh). It allowed me to remove the wax, and importantly, visually confirm the results. Thinking about it now, it's been over a year since I last had to use it, so I think my ears might've reached a new "equilibrium" point (they are supposed to be self-cleaning, after all).

    There is, presumably, a risk of damaging your ears any time you stick something in there, so I was just very careful to not do that.

  • Scoundreller 5 days ago

    In my area, they’re all labelled as “nasal syringes” because you’re not supposed to irrigate your ears randomly.

    The words of my pharmacist: “I don’t recommend you use this for your ears. I do it myself, but officially I don’t recommend it”

    Kinda how Q-Tips boxes mention all kinds of uses except jamming them into your ears for hygiene and pleasure.

  • [removed] 5 days ago
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  • askvictor 5 days ago

    A related trick is to put a few drops of (olive, or other cooking) oil in your ear canal. Let it sit for 5 minutes. Repeat on the other side, and do this for 3 days in a row. This softens up the hard wax in there. Then flush out with a syringe if you want. Obviously don't do either if you have a perforated ear drum.

    • hairywalt 5 days ago

      Yep, a few days of olive oil is generally recommended by GPs... I used to do this but now I self treat I don't really bother. But I guess it I'd have even more success if I did.

    • jnwatson 5 days ago

      Ear wax can vary a lot from hard to sticky depending on your genetic makeup.

      For the folks with extra sticky wax, softeners don't help.

  • stavros 5 days ago

    Over here we have these peroxide things you can get at the pharmacy. You pour three drops in your ear, it foams up and all the wax goes away. Do you not have those?

    • randcraw 5 days ago

      Can't you do the same thing by pouring half a capful of H2O2 into your ear while lying on your side? After it stops fizzing (about 10 minutes) you sit up and catch the effluent with a tissue. And no need to add oil or carefully shoot a stream of water at your eardrum.

  • m4tthumphrey 5 days ago

    Hey, I have just started to develop this problem and have been putting off going to the clinic. Can you link to the one you have please?

    • crazcarl 5 days ago

      Check out the ones that have a spray bottle attached rather than just a bulb as it allows for way more water before needing to refill. I think it was popularized under the name "Elephant Ear Wax Removal Kit" but there are knockoffs now as well that are the same thing.

    • hairywalt 5 days ago

      Mine is very similar to this one: https://www.simplymedsonline.co.uk/cold-and-flu/portia-ear-s...

      Unlike a trip to the doctor, when two to three flushes sorts it out, at home it is a case of maybe 10-20 repetitions depending how bad. But each one is really quick and I find there is no pain as the pressure is very low, unlike the doctor which did quite often hurt.

    • dgunay 4 days ago

      If self-treatment doesn't work out for you (I've suffered a few particularly stubborn cases over the years), I highly recommend going to an urgent care clinic. They have always been able to clear my ears out in less than 20 minutes, and it's very cheap with insurance.

sfmz 5 days ago

I'm gonna hijack this thread to promote sleep apnea machines... if you are tired and you say "well I'm just getting older...", that might not be what's happening:

"An estimated 30–39 million adults in the United States have obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), but only 6 million have been diagnosed." https://www.ncoa.org/adviser/sleep/sleep-apnea-statistics/

  • elric 5 days ago

    I hope you mean CPAP machines and not machines that give you sleep apnea -_-

    Sleep apnea sucks. Get tested. Get treated. It's a hassle but it's worth it. I'm typing this just after putting on my mask.

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relwin 5 days ago

Under $100 - a gently used bike from the local thrift shop. Added a rack and crate and use it for local errands such as grocery shopping, dentist visits, mailing stuff at the post office, all within a 3-mile radius. Saves driving a car and I get some exercise. Under $21 - a refurbished Thinkpad T520 with SSD, also from a thrift shop. Not life-changing but I've always loved the keyboard and it works fine for web browsing.

teuobk 5 days ago

Under $100: a Knipex pliers wrench. Best hand-tool ever! I originally got just the 7.25" size, but now I own everything from even shorter ones to much longer ones. I use them all of the time. If you're cheap, you can even get a knock-off version from Harbor Freight now at about half the cost of the German-made Knipex ones.

morkalork 5 days ago

I used to be utilitarian and had the minimal amount of everything around the house but I caved in and started buying duplicates. 1/2 cup measuring cup for pet food? I no longer use the same one as baking, I just bought another and now it lives in the container/bag of food. Measuring spoon for supplement powder? Same thing, it lives in the jar now. For under $100 you could buy every duplicate you'll need around your house. Never look for that "thingy" again, never think about what you last used it for or if it's dirty or in the wash again. It's small but it's worth it.

Along the same lines, Spotify. Could I torrent all the music I want, manage a library and set up streaming around the house, sync the files with my phone, etc? Yes. I used to do it too but now I just don't want to even think about it. $15/mo and it's solved. Forever.

  • vineyardmike 5 days ago

    This is also helpful if you travel a lot.

    I keep a bag of chargers/socks/toiletries/etc packed and ready. Don’t worry about losing a charger or unplugging the one you use daily. For $30, just get a second dedicated to traveling.

    If it’s something you struggle with packing or being ready, buy two. I know people who do this with clothes/suits, but that personally doesn’t fit my travel style.

  • colecut 5 days ago

    I won't argue that Spotify isn't a fantastic value, but the price has gone up and will continue to do so (especially if artists are ever going to make anything meaningful from streams), and nothing lasts forever..

    I find that online services in general degrade and become worse values and experiences for users over time, nearly inevitably. In many cases because initial funding can help to support the early unsustainable pricing.

    I guess I'm saying it's good to have a downloaded backup of the all-time favs while using spotify for convenient listening.

  • dvfjsdhgfv 5 days ago

    Strongly disagree about Spotify. Quality aside, many albums simply aren't there! I have my own routine of discovering new pearls (YouTube used to help me with that years ago, nowadays it just suggests what I already viewed or some random stuff) and I set aside some time for that. After that, I choose the albums I really like, in the best quality.

    The problem that Spotify actually tries to solve is that no matter how much we love that particular piece or album, we will get bored with it at some point, even if you dose your pleasure. So in theory Spotify could ease the process of finding interesting music. But in practice, I wound nothing can bet the tedious process of manual research and selection.

    • shiroiushi 5 days ago

      Also, what's to keep them from removing stuff later? The streaming video services do this all the time. It's a very common story to hear of someone watching some TV series, and then halfway through, it's removed from their streaming service and either disappears altogether, or moves to some other service that they're now expected to sign up for. It's much easier to just set sail on the high seas than to put up with this nonsense.

  • theshrike79 5 days ago

    I have the same policy for most cheapo stuff. Like measuring tapes.

    My good one is always Somewhere(tm), so I just bought a dozen cheap ones from Ikea. They're good enough for random "does this fit there" -measurements and there's enough of them so that it's impossible to lose them ALL at the same time :D

    I also have so many screw drivers, torx bits and 10mm sockets that it's impossible to lose them all. Are they the best quality? No. But it's more important to find one when I need one.

    • qup 4 days ago

      > I also have so many...10mm sockets

      Give me three minutes in your garage.

FranklinMaillot 5 days ago

Under 100€: a password manager. Every time I need to sign in to an account I haven't used in a long time, I appreciate how much it makes my life easier.

No need to remember which email address I used to sign up, which of my passwords I used, what special character I added... It makes 2FA a breeze. It works seamlessly across my computers, browsers, phones...

I also use it to store API keys, my social security number, passport number, IBAN, copies of documents I need to keep handy..

The added security is just the icing on the cake.

dgacmu 5 days ago

It wasn't under $1k but you can do some options for close-ish to that: a cargo e-bike.

It's been amazing and has let us remain a one car family despite two kids with a lot of activities. I adore it. About to hit 2k miles on it.

  • jhot 5 days ago

    Similar. 2 kids, 2 cargo e-bikes, 1 car. My wife has over 3k miles and I'm just under 2k (I work from home every day). We live in Colorado and bundle the kids up in ski clothes, and some nice buffs and hats and they do just fine for rides to school in the winter (if the roads are ok).

    With the plethora of bike trails and neighborhood routes, I'm nearly as fast as a car getting around without going overboard on pedal assist (I do about 18 mph).

  • littlestymaar 5 days ago

    Cargo e-bikes are tempting. I also have two kids and I've managed to work it out with just two seats on my bike (one front, one back) and now that the big one is tall enough to ride his bike I've got a "follow-me tandem" which allow me to tug him uphill, but carrying sports equipment is starting to be a hassle, so I'm seriously considering buying a cargo ebike to replace my current set-up.

    • hyperman1 5 days ago

      I've gone from follow-me to cargo e-bike (above €1000). The axis of the follow-me somehow broke in coldish weather, and we almost had an accident. Never again.

      But the cargo e-bike is fantastic. I've basically stopped using the bus, and everything under 30km with the kid has become no-brainer easy. I've done 1200km in 6 months now. But winter is coming, let's see how it goes.

  • askvictor 5 days ago

    I got a (non-cargo) e-bike for close to USD1000. Definitely a game changer - faster and more reliable than trains or driving to get to work. Any trip with 5km just becomes a no-friction option, where otherwise it might be tempting to get into the car. An e-bike is an excellent replacement for the second car (or, if you live in a convenient enough place, first car)

  • superconduct123 5 days ago

    I experienced a lot of the benefits mentioned in the comments on this one but rather than an e-bike I just got a cheap used 50cc gas scooter

    Its so much easier/faster for doing quick errands around the neighborhood

    Taking the car now feels overkill in comparison

    Just another option to consider rather than getting a second car

    • dgacmu 5 days ago

      Scooters are a fine option that gives you some of the advantages of the bike, such as "I can find a parking spot just about anywhere, suckers!", but I'd strongly consider electric for anyone pondering. For a purely local transit modality, the fact that I can charge it at home on 120v and never have to deal with a gas station is fantastic -- and, in fact, a second bonus is that it reduces how often I need to fill up the car. I've never owned an EV, but the e-bike experience has really started to convince me that whenever we get a new car, it will be electric for convenience alone. I hate the "ah crap, low on gas, can I play chicken with future-me or my wife about filling it up?" dance.

      The cargo part of the bike is pretty cool, though. I've seen some people do some cool loading hacks with a scooter, but the amount of stuff you can haul on a cargo bike is really fun. When I bought the e-bike, I rode my road bike down to the bike store, and rode the e-bike back home _hauling my road bike_. That was pretty awesome. :)

      • carlosjobim 2 days ago

        You go very very far with a scooter before having to fill up the tank. Motorcycles are in my opinion the best and most realistic option for reducing car traffic. E-Bikes probably second best.