legion

joined 2 years ago
[–] legion 2 points 1 year ago

However over time you notice some things. First, it doesn’t let you sit incorrectly (like with your leg folded under your butt). Second, you can sit in in for hours (covid work from home situation) and be perfectly fine. Third, after 3+ years of ownership, it’s immaculate.

This right here. People expect to sit in an expensive chair and get a soft, plush, "comfortable" feeling. No, that's not what a quality chair is for. A quality chair's purpose is to let you be 40 years old, sit in it for an 8 hour workday, and get up at the end of the day with zero back pain (at least, none from sitting in the chair).

I forget how uncomfortable chairs can be until I travel for work and have to sit in something else for a whole day.

[–] legion 1 points 1 year ago

I spent $300 and $400 for my two used ones.

[–] legion 10 points 1 year ago (9 children)

A true quality office chair, like the Herman Miller Aeron, and not one of those awful "racing chair" game streamer pieces of junk.

Doesn't even have to be brand new. I bought both of my Aerons used, and I think their manufacture dates are like 2008 and 2013. I've had them for many years, sat in the 2008 one every workday for the past 10 years, and it might as well still be new. I see no reason that I won't sit in it for the next 10 years. I could have gone through a bunch of crappy Office Depot chairs in that span.

[–] legion 20 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

At what age do you tell boomer parents the truth about Christmas? That their daughter who moved away to the "bIg CiTy" so she could get an "eDuCaTiOn" and pursue a "CaReEr" and "dRiNk LaTtEs" is actually happy there, is not going to come home from Christmas, fall in love with the blue collar boy who never left town, and magically discover the rural housewife life is what she actually wanted all along?

[–] legion 3 points 1 year ago

Definite wins for me:

  • Weather widget small tile with added info (multi-day forecast especially)
  • Shared Apple Music playlists
  • Local awareness Emergency Alerts
[–] legion 6 points 1 year ago

Capitalism: “No.”

[–] legion 2 points 1 year ago

I need to start dropping in during the gameday threads.

[–] legion 3 points 1 year ago

“Everything is an RPG” says the guy whose company has stripped out all but the most basic of RPG elements from their games.

[–] legion 5 points 1 year ago

I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for any sort of epic crash.

I expect that home ownership is going to become solely for the upper-middle class and up, and that home prices won't make any serious downward movement.

I expect the housing crisis will eventually start to ease as areas become more accepting of high-density housing development, and that will become the sole province of people with finances beneath the home ownership class.

Essentially, the establishment of a much more distinct and explicit two-tier system. Prices in one will have minimal impact on the other, much like how any swing in prices for small passenger boats has no impact on the price of yachts.

[–] legion 8 points 1 year ago

Everything I own, except the burial plot. I bought that for death.

[–] legion 23 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Bidet standing up. Making it brown rain.

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