this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2024
1020 points (98.7% liked)
People Twitter
5283 readers
618 users here now
People tweeting stuff. We allow tweets from anyone.
RULES:
- Mark NSFW content.
- No doxxing people.
- Must be a tweet or similar
- No bullying or international politcs
- Be excellent to each other.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Watching food cook is appetizing and also a necessity to know when it is done. Watching the slurry of fat, food rests and soap is not.
Then why do washing machines for clothes have windows?
Pretty colors spin round make fun watch
What are you doing with your clothes? Mine are rarely covered with fat, grease or food.
Then you ain't livin, pal.
They didn’t back in my day.
To check the progress before electric displays and fancy indicator lights. Windows came before those upgrades when machines were still dial controlled.
But they still have windows. Plus I think old fashioned top loading ones didn't actually.
That's what I still use and it does not. I have zero reason to know what's going on inside however because it literally operates on the equivalent of a kitchen egg timer. It's done when the dial says it's done. All controls are entirely mechanical. Washing machine is older than I am. I bet the damn thing is 50 years old.
Edit: Same as this one which seems to be a model from the 70s.
Because people liked the feature. Look, I'm just saying WHY they added windows. That was the reason. I'm not saying it's a good reason or no one could figure things out before. They added them for that reason, people liked it, and it stuck around. Yet, there's always gonna be someone dragging out their 30 year old washer going "but mine is fine!". Never said it wasn't. Or someone pointing out that not all washers have a window even today. Cool. Nifty. But if yours does have one, that was the reason they got added.
Congrats on having an ancient machine with no variable timing that finishes early and being able to look in tells you what step it's on easily at a glance instead of staring at your worn away knob. Good for you. Was it relevant at all to the discussion about why they added windows to machines that do?
Yes, it was relevant to the comment I replied to. It was an off topic segue that's common in the nature of what we call threaded discussions. That you feel you should copy and paste your response as if it's a personal attack to you or your argument is quite perplexing, but everybody's got their own way of seeing the world yeah?
Also, the thing is actually controlled by the knob's timer. There's no such thing as finishing early, the knob is what tells it to do a rinse cycle or whatever. You can set it at different points in order to make it do different things and it ticks away along it's cycle because of that. You hit switches to change the amount of water you use and select different start times based on the soiling and load size. It's pretty rad for a dinosaur, though you do have to make decisions that you might not have to make with an electronic high efficiency washer.
Because people liked the feature. Look, I'm just saying WHY they added windows. That was the reason. I'm not saying it's a good reason or no one could figure things out before. They added them for that reason, people liked it, and it stuck around. Yet, there's always gonna be someone dragging out their 30 year old washer going "but mine is fine!". Never said it wasn't. Or someone pointing out that not all washers have a window even today. Cool. Nifty. But if yours does have one, that was the reason they got added.
Mine has a window, but if you saw something through the window that made you want to intervene, there's precious little you could do
Maybe for you. They put windows on cloths machines and people watch the heck out of those, let me watch the dishes clean.