- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- technology@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- technology@beehaw.org
The Verge published this spam article about the “best printers of 2024” to demonstrate how terrible Google’s search results are. It now appears as the top non-sponsored post if you search “best printer” on Google.
I love a good, informative troll.
Yeah…have you ever had to buy new appliances? I just got a house, half my searches were for appliances, fittings and reviews and the results all sucked.
Well yeah I do have appliances, but I don’t think I’ve ever searched for product reviews for household appliances.
I just don’t find reviews for this stuff very helpful I guess.
Then what do you do?
I just evaluate the available products based on price and features.
But how do you know what matters in some appliance you didn’t even know existed nevermind how it works?
I don’t really follow you sorry.
I can’t think of a time I’ve needed to buy an appliance I didn’t know existed nor how it works ?
Even if I didn’t really know anything that doesn’t really matter. Usually purchases are heavily influenced by my budget. It’s not a question of what features I need, it’s a question of which product is the most reliable given the amount I want to pay.
Well I’m not a homeowner so I’ve never purchased a household appliance really, but I also grew up in a time (Gen-Z) where most everything is one type of scam or another, everyone wants to sell you a course or some other crap, and everything in an ad is nothing you want to ever have, so I feel the need to research everything thoroughly even if ultimately my budget is the deciding factor.
If I wanted to buy a new washing machine, I have no idea what goes into that, like what makes a good washing machine and fundamentally I don’t really know how it works, I know there’s water and spinning, but beyond that it might as well be magic, so how would I choose what to buy if say there were three options at the same price point?
Case in point last time I bought a microwave I just got one that seemed to have as few electronics as possible, staying well away from anything advertised and staying well away from microwaves that could auto-connect to car hifi Bluetooth bullshit.
Somehow I got lucky with a really reliable old one with a fun actual real analog bell you can ding by turning the knob on and off, but at least with that I knew more watts equals more betterer, but with a washing machine I have simply no clue, more water? More spin? Sucks in the pods better? I’ve no idea. So how do you decide? What about a boiler? A dryer? A kettle? An oven? A stove?
I think you’re over thinking these things.
There’s just no way I would “research” washing machines. They all work in the same way. They all have the same features. The last time I bought one the deciding factor was a 10 year factory guarantee.
Idk that sounds like a dangerous way to lock yourself into dealing with some bullshit for years to come but fair play. I’m certainly glad I didn’t buy a microwave this way.