They always crosspost their stuff to imgur.TIL: GasBandit has been reading didyouknowblog.com.
Sheesh. And people get on my case because I haven't seen some movie or other.I don't have a smartphone or a laptop, so...
I'm actually a little jealous. I wish I could get by without the electroleash.Sheesh. And people get on my case because I haven't seen some movie or other.
--Patrick
Maybe Google just pities da fool who has such a predictable schedule.Google's showing some false positives for me. It's listing MRT stations that I never went to.
... at least, I don't remember going to those stations...
"Vandalism and counter-productive." It's certainly vandalism, but it's clearly quite productive. I'll take the one evil to eradicate the other.
Let's hope they're not closely related enough to hybridize.TIL cockroaches and praying mantises are closely related.
Seems to me that's an item that was thought up by someone who thinks nobody has kids or pets. Which is ironic given that one of the sample buttons is "huggies"TIL: that the Amazon Dash Button is a real product.
What the hell world?
Seriously? Do not want. The article does a good job of pointing out why this is an awful idea.
Dvorak has been a new-technology hater since the 80's.Cranky John Dvorak is cranky. Also water is wet and fire is hot.
My guess would be they're configured on the amazon website, similar to "One-click purchasing" has been.It depends how customizable the dash buttons are. I would imagine they could be customized for amount, card used, shipping preference, pricing preference, etc., and if so, I can see them easily being used and becoming a big thing (at least in households with wifi).
If they can't be customized in most of those ways, these seems like there's no way more than a tiny fraction of households will use them.
I can't count the number of times in my life I've sat on the commode and said "We're low on toilet paper" and then forgot to get it when at the store later that week, necessitating an emergency trip. I'd certainly put one in the bathroom just for that, if nothing else.Dash Button is simple to set up. Use the Amazon app on your smartphone to easily connect to your home Wi-Fi network and select the product you want to reorder with Dash Button. Once connected, a single press automatically places your order. Amazon sends an order alert to your phone, so it's easy to cancel if you change your mind. Unless you elect otherwise, Dash Button responds only to your first press until your order is delivered
I'd be curious to know how well it works. Personally I'd be worried about Amazon raising the prices however they please and not even giving you the best option available on their own website, just because most people will never bother to check once they've set it to auto-order.I signed up to be in on the Dash beta a few weeks ago. If I actually get in, I'll let you guys know how it works.
http://hackaday.com/2015/05/12/inside-the-amazon-dash-button/I'm curious how hackable the buttons will be. Easy one-press buttons to send a specific message to a specific site/phone number/mail address exist but this could be a cheap and easy alternative. I can see them being used for a thousand things. Also, I can see the benefit for some people, but you'd have to be either savvy enough to keep checking, or use it just as an automated shopping list creator instead of actually ordering, or not care about getting the best deal. I can't be the only one who, every time he shops, checks which of 3 or 4 preferred brands of, say, toilet paper, is in promotion that week, surely?
Fridges already exist that keep track of their contents, make you enter what you are removing, and then order replacements for you. In fact, they've existed for at least three years now.If they're in any way successful, next stop: fridges and washing machines and whatnot with built-in buttons to do this. Oy.
See above.I'd love to see a built in barscanner in a device like a fridge. Once you empty that carton of milk, scan it and add it to your grocery list.
That has been the logical order of operation since fridges were invented, aye.Fridges already exist that . . . make you enter what you are removing.
--Patrick