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The Verge shows how Google search is useless
(www.theverge.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Do any of us still use Google in this way though?
Sure maybe nanna still talks to google like an Oracle... "oh Google what is the best printer of 2024"
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.
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.
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.
I can see that your microwave is important to you, but to me "I don't care" doesn't really capture how little I care about my microwave.
I think the one we have is probably the cheapest available when we bought it 8 years ago. The buying decision probably took less than 1 minute, without hyperbole. I only ever use one button, I just press start n times until the timer says something reasonable.
When buying this stuff I don't really see a risk of being locked into any bullshit because all microwaves can perform their basic function of heating food.
Sorry this just isn't my experience. I've never encountered a microwave which doesn't start when you press start. If I had one that was faulty I would discard it and buy another one for $20.
Well I'm glad you've been lucky but that's all it is, you're a bit out of touch.
It's not faulty, it is that way by design. And this is basically the standard nowadays. Just look at most TVs - trying to open an app on one is like pulling teeth, it lags to high heaven just navigating a menu.
Microwaves might be cheap ($20 though? Jeez where do you live! They start at £50-£80 minimum here) but I was just using that as an example to prove the point. Boilers aren't cheap.
Meh. Maybe I am a bit out of touch, but honestly you might be too.
There's a whole cohort of people, I daresay most people, who wouldn't bother looking at reviews to purchase this type of item.
If today is the day I'm going to buy a washing machine, then I go to a shop that sells them, I select one based on price vs features, arrange delivery, and leave.