danemodsandy
Well-known member
Even as appliance quality goes down, complexity goes up, because today, features are supposed to be what sells.
Unfortunately, this ladling on of features (made possible by cheap electronics) has resulted in a lot of appliances that are needlessly complicated to operate, with baffling jargon used to describe cycles or other settings.
The U.K.'s Guardian has a terrific article about just this subject, with something you'd never see in a U.S. paper - some particularly egregious offenders are singled out by manufacturer, brand name and model number.
They have it spot on the money - there is no real reason for half of what you see on appliances nowadays:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/feb/27/household-appliances-too-complicated
Unfortunately, this ladling on of features (made possible by cheap electronics) has resulted in a lot of appliances that are needlessly complicated to operate, with baffling jargon used to describe cycles or other settings.
The U.K.'s Guardian has a terrific article about just this subject, with something you'd never see in a U.S. paper - some particularly egregious offenders are singled out by manufacturer, brand name and model number.
They have it spot on the money - there is no real reason for half of what you see on appliances nowadays:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/feb/27/household-appliances-too-complicated
