phillymatt53
Well-known member
Don't let the Millenial crowd hear you say that!I'd get their most budget model. I didn't need stupid wifi.
Don't let the Millenial crowd hear you say that!I'd get their most budget model. I didn't need stupid wifi.
The social disease of WiFi has been spread as a so-called "convenience" among the masses to suppliment the "wireless" trend which first started decades ago when the first "cordless" telephones and remote control tv's were available.Why do people want everything WiFi? It's stupid. Why are all dishwashers in Europe and down under built with complete cabinets?
And Matt just what do you think this website is!?
Oh, but Chet, they DO have a practical use in appliances!The difference is semiconductors and wifi have a practical application in personal computers, servers, and in the most of data delivery. They do not however have any practical application in appliances.
Oh, but Chet, they DO have a practical use in appliances!
For the manufacturers!
A big ole weak spot in design, prone to failure, to boost sales revenue.
And that system is one that works well for manufacturers.Oh, yes indeed.
1) Advertising bait. Screens, jingles, features, ect make the customer feel like they are buying something better than their old machine.
2) Profound cheapening. Manufacturers can do away with advanced suspensions, material, quality parts, self regulating designs, deep sumps, intelligent engineering, ect ect because the programming will take care of all the shortfalls. If the electronics can spend an hour trying to balance a load and abort it altogether at the slightest centimeter of tub displacement you can do away with the robust suspension that previously handled it without a hiccup. You can make a dishwasher sump that is so shallow with such a cheap tiny motor that the control can afford to spend half an hour burping bubbles out of the sump and revving the motor up and down in real time to prevent dry cavitation.
3) Obsolesce. Electronics have a finite life expectancy. If they can make it past the 1 year warranty but fail after 3 years that is a new machine scored.
And that system is one that works well for manufacturers.
I've often spoken about society's "conditioning", and that's one thing that manufacturers count on.
A lot of our dishwashers are freestanding and slotted into a gap underneath the kitchen counter, as you would a fridge or washing machine here. Integrated dishwashers are common too, though.Why do people want everything WiFi? It's stupid. Why are all dishwashers in Europe and down under built with complete cabinets?
Admittedly, this can be useful, but the last thing that I want is to wait to be told that the laundry is dry, but here to each his own, as they say“Stupid” wifi on my appliances ping me notifications when they are done, particularly useful with the dryer as that is outside the main house.
Which you could also do with a simple timer on the machine, and forces you to spend your time waiting to be told that the free electricity time has started: thank you, but no, thank you, at least not for me: me I want to decide when it is the right time to do the laundry.“Stupid” wifi allows me to easily delay the start of the washer or dishwasher to start at a specific time, which is especially useful to coincide with free electricity sessions we get from our provider when there is excessive renewable energy on the grid.
So how does it happen that none of the many bugs in the software of my expensive German washing machine has been fixed in two years despite the manufacturer having been informed?“Stupid” wifi updates the machines as and when to improve performance. It also allows you to select additional cycles and options should you want, which aren’t available on the control panel.
And what do you do with those consumption data? And what is the difference between reading them from the app or directly from the machine?“Stupid” wifi tells me the exact consumption that my appliances have used.
"Necessity" is a very subjective matter, and surely I will not be the one questioning yours.It isn’t a necessity, and of course doesn’t load, unload or fold the laundry for you. But I find the benefits very useful, far from stupid.
Nice to meet you, Jon.Jon, (a stupid, conditioned millennial).
Bravo for that long and informative posting!Nice to meet you, Jon.
I am Don, an even more stupid boomer that tries hard not to be conditioned and, above all, not to be profiled
Just as an example, you have never asked why you need an app to use additional programmes that could be directly on the machine, and probably are.[...] nobody is forcing a gun to anybody’s head to use wifi on appliances, you’re free to use it at will. I can completely understand why one wouldn’t want to, but I wouldn’t brand them as “stupid” or “conditioned”
I am the first to reject conspiracy theories, but when they are supported by profits and shares value...It’s not a massive tin foil hat conspiracy like some others like to make things out to be.
And yet another bravo to this posting!Just as an example, you have never asked why you need an app to use additional programmes that could be directly on the machine, and probably are.
Instead you have passively accepted that the app is needed to use those programmes as they told you, and maybe you haven't even thought that of the countless programmes of washing machines, only a few are actually used, so you have also passively believed that those additional programmes are of any usefulness
Call it the way you want, but this for me is "conditioning": making people accept things without questioning them, without any critical thinking.
I am the first to reject conspiracy theories, but when they are supported by profits and shares value...
Jon, the matter is not the usefulness, which is largely subjective, but it is the manipulation and profilingMy question is, if I (and others) find something useful, then why does it upset others so much who don’t find it useful?
Sorry, phillymatt53 / Matt, but here I have to disagree.It's just not normal to be so addicted to a device or service.
I understand you're concerns, and where young people have been born-into this new age of "convenience products".Jon, the matter is not the usefulness, which is largely subjective, but it is the manipulation and profiling
I have no objection of sort if someone likes to tell a device to turn off the light, but if that device is a tool to profile and condition people, then I have plenty of objections, because what is at stake is not their freedom (of which, to be honest, I couldn't care less) but also mine, and I greatly care of my freedom.
Sorry, phillymatt53 / Matt, but here I have to disagree.
It is not normal for old farts like us, who grew up in times when critical thinking was valued in the society to the point that it was taught in schools (which typically were public schools, and where quite good because the money spent in education was not considered wasted).
But for younger people who have always seen that and only that, it is normal, as sad and unfortunate it can be