• 5 Posts
  • 15 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: July 30th, 2023

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  • I wouldn’t put too much stock into that article. Yes, it’s a good idea to avoid the “smart” machines, but the article has some misleading advice:

    While Whirlpool’s warranty and coverage leaves much to be desired, GE and LG have policies that better support the customer’s right to repair and prevent waste.

    GE and LG are notoriously less repairable because their parts keep changing and after the warranty ends you’re unlikely to find replacement parts. So they need good warranties just to stay relevant. Whirlpool may have a short warranty but they have a reputation as one of the very few brands that rarely changes their parts and you can get parts from decades old out-of-warranty machines. Whirlpool parts are common. I had a Whirlpool dryer die after ~22 years. I called an appliance repair shop. They won’t come out and look at a machine for free, but one thing they said over the phone when I mentioned it was Whirlpool was that there’s a very good chance parts will still be available, unlike most other brands. So they came out and indeed they could get the motor and belt and whatever else I needed. But it turned out the cost of repair was higher than the cost of replacement. Had i been available I probably could have just bought the parts and fixed it myself.

    The concerning privacy implications of Wi-Fi-enabled smart washing machines greatly outweigh the supposed convenience of starting a load remotely.

    The more interesting feature is probably getting status so you can turn off the buzzer and get a more pleasant signal on your phone wherever you are and remove your clothes before they wrinkle (as opposed to wasting energy with a end-of-cycle spinning). But I agree that it’s overall a bad trade-off to have washers and dryers on the network. If I could have a FOSS bluetooth app that has no WAN access, I would go for that. But that’s not on offer.

    BTW, I bought a vented dryer (yikes!) because the only eco-respectful ventless dryers for a non-astronomical price were “smart” (thus privacy-abusing). I had to choose between privacy and the environment and chose privacy by buying a used vented gas dryer. It’s a shame when privacy and environment are at odds.

    Another reason to avoid “smart” washers/dryers: not all functions are available on the physical control panel. So when your phone gets old & out of service and the app is pinned to certain versions, you would actually lose control over some of the functionality.







  • When you say “some users don’t trigger it”, that’s probably a feature. It’s important to know if a user is federated with the server the msg is posted to in order for them to get the notification.

    Indeed we can always write a markup hyperlink and put the users address in it, but that’s not the point. That would not ensure that they get the notification. It’s the automatic generation of that link that tells us whether the user was recognized.

    I believe we 1st have a documentation bug since the docs do not cover this. And functionality-wise, we should be able to see a list of who is mentioned for the purpose of notifications.




  • I’m using the stock web client of slrpnk.net (whatever version that is), and when I type @Emperor@feddit.uk … oh, wow, that worked. Strange. In the cases that failed me, I copy-pasted the user’s address. So apparently it must be typed out manually to trigger auto-complete. I see that the client just makes it a markdown hyperlink to your profile. That’s useful, but what’s more important is that the user get a notification. When i copy-paste the address (e.g. @Emperor@feddit.uk) there’s nothing to signal to me that the user was recognized and that they will actually be populated in the “mentions” field of the JSON record.






  • Exactly… makes no sense that that post would trigger a lot of people. We can only guess because down votes don’t come with an explanation.

    What I’ve noticed in the nation-specific communities is there’s usually a strong amount of national pride. Denmark in particular but I notice the same in Netherlands communities. If a post can be taken to be negative or embarrassing to the region, criticism tends to be unwanted and down votes are likely.

    In the case at hand the post was factually accurate and not really provocative. Since people wouldn’t likely get too emotionally hot-headed about ATMs, it seems unlikely that a large number of people would be so emotionally triggered. Probably just one person with many accounts.





  • I just found the contrary. In a lemmy search field querying this thread (https://slrpnk.net/post/2450620) comes up empty every time (#Lemmy → Lemmy). Just to get here to respond, I had to search for the support community then browse for this thread. All in Lemmy.

    Kbin cannot cross-post to anywhere… not to another kbin or to lemmy. But I was able to search for a specific #Kbin thread in the lemmy search form, then search for another kbin magazine in lemmy, then use Lemmy to cross-post a kbin thread to another kbin instance.