(I’m trying to adjust my shopping habits for quality, long-lasting goods from reputable brands. This isn’t some hailcorporate thing)

  • @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Honestly: The LTT merch store. The product was never bad, support was very good as well as the will to fix problems (albeit at a slower pace than one might be used from amazon).
    I was complimented from the family for the quality and look.
    It’s certainly pricey but alright.

    Bonus: The branding on most is very minimal.

  • @ABCDE@lemmy.world
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    01 year ago

    Lush, specifically their shampoo. I would use other stuff of theirs but I live in a country which they do not sell in, so the shampoo (which lasts for ages) is something I buy a lot of when I can get it.

    Apple I generally trust (computers, not phones, those are too expensive and limited).

  • NaibofTabr
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    01 year ago

    DeWalt (aka default) tools. There’s a reason every building contractor is carrying around DeWalt drills and saws - they hold up to daily jobsite use, you don’t have to handle them like they’re fragile, you can get them dirty and they keep working.

    Don’t buy Ryobi or Black&Decker unless you know it’s something you’re going to beat to hell for one job and then dispose of. And don’t any buy high speed rotary tools from Harbor Freight.

    • @NineMileTower@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      The second part of your comment is flat out wrong for most homeowners. Ryobi tools are fine for Henry Homeowner. And specialty tools from harbor freight are fine. Buy cheap and if you use it enough to break it, then buy quality.

      • @Lemmeenym@lemm.ee
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        01 year ago

        Also for more active hobbyists Harbor Freight can be improved to be good tools. Things like replacing a cheap drive belt with a better quality belt is all some of their tools need. Searching some tool blogs can tell you if a tool is fixable or just trash.

        • @Gerudo@lemm.ee
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          01 year ago

          Their bottom shelf store brand stuff is rough but gets the job done most the time. Their upgraded in house brands are actually pretty good.

        • @Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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          01 year ago

          Makita Europe has factories in the UK and Germany, and their products are better quality generally than DeWalt.

          Pros use Makita or Bosch Professional

          DeWalt is a kinda “poser” brand on building sites lol

      • They have been a shit-tier tool for a long time after being dead solid for decades. I don’t know if they’ve moved up to “ok” recently, but I haven’t bought B&D in 15 years because they were crap.

  • @unrushed233@lemmings.world
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    01 year ago

    This might sound weird, but Apple. I was NEVER disappointed by any of the products I bought. Sure, they are fucking expensive. Sure, they sometimes release really dumb products that most people probably shouldn’t buy (e.g. the 2015 MacBook). But if you make all the right considerations before your purchase, I’m pretty sure you will have a product that won’t disappoint you. At least that’s been my experience so far. That doesn’t mean that I’m perfectly happy with everything, for example I’m trying to switch away from an iPhone (I will definitely keep using macOS laptops/desktops though) for privacy reasons. I wasn’t really disappointed here, when I bought this phone, I knew what I was getting myself into, but Google isn’t much better.

    Proton for secure email/calendar/whatever they offer now. I’ve been a subscriber to their paid plan for years, really happy so far.

    IVPN and Mullvad for a trustworthy, private VPN provider

  • @Gerudo@lemm.ee
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    01 year ago

    Stanley. I have my grandads original Stanley thermos from around the 40’s and its in amazing condition. The new Stanley products are still top notch.

    • @marx2k@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      I bought two large Stanley thermoses when they were on sale locally. Used them every day for 5 years. Besides a few cosmetic blemishes they’re as good as new.

  • @NineMileTower@lemmy.world
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    01 year ago

    Garmin watches, Carhartt clothing, RTIC cups, Crocs, Yamaha guitars, New Balance shoes, Birkenstocks, Murray’s Hair Dressing,

  • @netvor@lemmy.world
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    01 year ago

    Does it count as reliable if I only have sample size of 1?

    Beyerdynamic. Had DT770 pro for 8 years before they “broke” (cable connection failed, I think it’s still fixable–making them last for many more years—by someone with skills I don’t have, and they could have lasted more if I handled them a tad better.)

    Recently I replaced them with DT770 pro X and they sound perfect to me.

    • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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      01 year ago

      Beyers are tanks, my DT770s are old enough to vote. The few parts that do tend to break are trivially cheap to buy replacements for.

    • @tahoe@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      I love Proton’s mission just like all Lemmy users but I wouldn’t say you can trust them in terms of quality. Apart from Proton Mail and Proton VPS, most of their other products unfortunately have a deep lack of features.

        • @tahoe@lemmy.world
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          01 year ago

          I’m mainly talking about Drive and Pass. I don’t really remember as it’s been a while since I’ve tested them, but the situation doesn’t seem to have changed. Here’s a good thread for Drive. I remember Pass having problems with auto-fill which made it unusable for me.

          I have Proton Unlimited but only use two of their services because of this, it’s pretty frustrating.

  • Hopefully they haven’t gone downhill lately but I’ve always gotten good quality products from Anker and one time they even sent me an “upgraded” set of headphones for free because I complained about the pair I bought having poor sound.

    • @Num10ck@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      anker has a smart home division called Eufy that has some TERRIBLE software that ruins nice hardware like their doorbells

      • drphungky
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        01 year ago

        We had a Eufy baby monitor that was so bad (replaced three times when trying to update firmware, the fourth time it died it was due to a drop) that it has actually made me think less of Anker as a company. If they stick to that being their low quality bargain brand, maybe I’ll consider Anker again, but for now I’m out.

    • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      My history with anchor is varied. At one point they produced the finest of everything at the cheapest possible price.

      Then for a couple of years they produced a bunch of garbage that would barely get the job done.

      I was buying a lot of anchor products for work. About half the power delivery chargers I purchased over a three or four month period burned out at least one of the ports. I have a bunch of battery banks where the USBC port stopped working.

      Now they seem to be back on top again, but I don’t just blindly trust them and buy from them anymore I’ll get one or two and test things out before I buy a bunch.

      • @shyguyblue@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        Yeah, i can second the power strip thing. I have three right now, one is completely dead, the usba/c ports don’t work on another, third one has been flawless so far.

        I might look into the newer options, but I’m a bit skeptical now…

  • Caveman
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    01 year ago

    If you consider software a product/good then Linux is very good. The kernel still supports systems with security updates that are older than a lot of people here.

  • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Hottest take on this site: Apple.

    I use my 2011 MacBook Pro to manage my 80k photos. My phone is six years old. My iPad Pro is five? (Edit: I lied, it’s a 2017 model) Years old.

    I don’t use their desktops, I use Linux for my servers and windows for playing games. But my Apple shit for casual use has all lasted me an insane amount of time.

    My 13 year old MacBook Pro still gets through 1.75 playthroughs of Beetlejuice on max brightness! Full disclaimer, I originally bought it for games and used Windows 7 always plugged in, and only now it has an SSD and OSX and the battery has 30 cycles. BUT STILL

    • @corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      01 year ago

      Hottest take on this site: Apple.

      That’s because there’s such a huge and biased fan base, and they drown out the actual objective opinions.

      • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        01 year ago

        I notice that here as well. I use tech products from all companies, but the frothing hate for everything Apple brings me back to my teens, in 2003, when I also felt that way. I started coming around when Apple started putting Intel processors in their machines and giving them decent specs for the price.

        I originally bought my first Apple product, a MacBook Pro in 2008 for playing video games! All the PC laptops at the time were huge and had terrible battery life, while a 2008 MBP was tiny, light, and the battery lasted twice as long as GAMING LAPTOP. All I had to do was install Windows. That died in an unfortunate sticky spill and was replaced with my 2011 MBP, which is still going.

        Now I just have that, my original first-Gen Apple Watch, a six year old iPhone, and an old iPad Pro. And they’re all still fast (well, not the watch) and work fantastically.

    • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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      01 year ago

      Lucky for you, but the truth is, Apple isn’t that great or reliable. Here is a list of all the MacBook recalls, and it’s a list from 2021. Battery issues of possibly catching fire, screens cracking, logic board failures, etc…

      Here is another list that is from 2023 of different Apple devices.

      Apple Watch Series 6 – Black Screen Issue iPhone 12 and 12 Pro – No Sound Issues iPhone 11 – Touch Issues AirPods Pro – Sound Issues iPad Air 3rd gen – Blank Screen Issue Smart Battery Case – Charging Issues iPhone 6s and 6s Plus – No Power Issues 15-inch MacBook Pro – Battery Overheating/Fire Risk MacBook lineup – Keyboard Issues 13-inch MacBook Pro – Display Backlight Issues Apple Three-Prong AC Wall Plug Adapter – Electrical Shock Risk iPhone X – Touch Issues iPhone 7 – No Service Issues iPhone 6 Plus – Multi-touch and Display Flickering Issues Apple European AC Wall Plug – Electrical Shock Risk Beats Pill XL – Overheating and Fire Risk Apple 5W European USB Power Adapter – Overheating Risk Apple Ultracompact USB Power Adapter – Electrical Shock Risk

      • @greatgizzards@new-reddit.jinomial.com
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        1 year ago

        Where’s a list of recalls for non Apple devices for comparison?

        I’ve had several devices that should have been recalled and weren’t so good on Apple for recalling anything at all.

        Did you read the wiki leaks for chained exploits to achieve privilege escalation on various devices? Apple devices had the smallest attack surface by far and had already patched several vectors before they leaked.

        With android, you had several paths to choose from to achieve full control of the device for each and every android version, and the likelihood that a device was patched, if a patch existed at all, was extremely low. Patch releases would lag published exploits for years.

        Apple has always used the right hardware for the job, while others add as much power as possible to hide the fact their software / hardware marriage is abysmal.

        And now there is Apple silicon, which is even better!

        • Hardware: Winner Apple
        • Software: Winner Apple
        • Security: Winner Apple
        • User friendliness: Winner Apple
        • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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          01 year ago

          And you had anything beyond saying it to back it up.

          Hardware I’ve already proven, you, well… You made something up and hoped for the best.

          Software, as we are talking more about macOS at the beginning, it’s a joke that you are claiming macOS has more and various software than Windows. There is a reason even Apple uses Windows and not macOS.

          Security, again, you made a quick claim and nothing to back it up. But here is a list of iOS exploits just from 2022-2023.

          User friendliness: this reeks of desperation. And has been proven in the past to be wrong, but keep trolling. I’ll keep laughing 🤣

          • @greatgizzards@new-reddit.jinomial.com
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            1 year ago

            All you have proven is that Apple has had recalls in the past. Recalls happen. I’m not sure what point you are trying to make.

            Hardware you have not proven at all. You linked to Apple recalls. Who are you comparing them to? Whose products in this space are more trustworthy to you?

            Security… here is a list of CVEs Samsung is patching just for August. I’m glad they have SMRs, but what is the uptake? Android 14 has a measly 13% share. 70.5% of iPhones are running the latest iOS. Security patches that don’t get installed don’t provide security. You can’t trust android developers to not exploit the hell out of the android os. The OS wasn’t designed with security in mind and anybody that reads the API can see that. The entire ecosystem can’t be trusted.

            Critical CVE-2024-21461

            High CVE-2024-4610, CVE-2024-0153, CVE-2024-21460, CVE-2024-21465, CVE-2024-21469, CVE-2024-21462, CVE-2024-34724, CVE-2024-34725, CVE-2024-34726, CVE-2024-23373, CVE-2024-23372, CVE-2024-23368, CVE-2024-23380, CVE-2024-26923, CVE-2024-31334, CVE-2024-31335, CVE-2024-20077, CVE-2023-20971, CVE-2023-21351, CVE-2024-34731, CVE-2024-34735, CVE-2024-34737, CVE-2024-34738, CVE-2024-34739, CVE-2024-34740, CVE-2024-34741, CVE-2024-34743, CVE-2024-34736, CVE-2024-34742, CVE-2024-34727, CVE-2024-34745, CVE-2024-34746, CVE-2024-36971, CVE-2024-32896

            User friendliness… it is well documented that Apple cares more about users than developers and now, as a result, developers target Apple platforms too. Why? Because developers follow the users. It doesn’t matter how enticing Microsoft is for developers, if there aren’t users, developers will leave. Because Microsoft can’t be trusted and constantly screw over their users. Microsoft is only still in use because they have plenty of monopolies. Every time one of their monopolies falls, users flock to their competitor. Microsoft cannot be trusted to execute. Zune, Windows Phone, Kinect. Office has been replaced. Xbox replaced. And windows is being replaced.

            Here is an analysis of usability and reliability that sums it all up in terms we all understand. Money. Macs are cheaper than PCs.

            This debate is over. ^

            • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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              01 year ago

              Debate is over? You come here, attempt very poor attempt of a flood of BS, and call that a debate? 🤡

              Bonus points for linking to the well known and debunked “claim” that macs are cheaper over the long term than Windows. Wow, that sad attempt took me back (and I knew you’d use it). I can see you never looked into that claim. It claims that Windows needed AV, a $100+ a year, but macOS some mhow doesn’t, even though macOS malware was on the rise even then. Combined with how they claimed half the enterprise security suites somehow weren’t needed for macOS showed it wasn’t a serious attempt (a lot like your messages).

                • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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                  It wasn’t a debate not because I wanted a thesis, it’s because all you wanted was to troll. Your entire comment was “lol, trust me bro. Here’s a well known lie to back me up”. And you were terrible at it. Go back to Reddit.

    • If you’re much of a tech person, you must have been living under a rock if you think all apple products are good. Several of their laptops and desktops have been large misses, some have had critical flaws that burn them out after a few years, one of their iPhones had a battery/processor combo flaw that had the batteries not deliver enough voltage after like a year and instead of doing a recall, they put out an update that undercooked the apu so the phone ran shittier but wouldn’t rando restart anymore. Then there was the iPhone that lost reception if “you were holding it wrong”.

      Also, there’s a reason they were about to go bankrupt in the mid 90’s. They got saved by Bill Gates and got lucky with the Ipod, that saved their company.

          • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            01 year ago

            Oh yeah, the thing that all devices do so they don’t just shut off randomly. Apple was just punished cuz they weren’t transparent about it. Would you rather your phone slow down as the battery is almost empty, or shut off at 15%?

            • Lol. That is 100% not true, Fan Boy. My four year old samsung still pulls the same test numbers and frequencies as when it was new. Apple was using flawed batteries with a processor that couldn’t cope and just tried to cover it up.

              • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                01 year ago

                My almost six year old iPhone XS Max also has a very healthy battery. But if we kept our phones for a long time, when your and my batteries aren’t healthy, both of our phones are absolutely going to throttle when voltage drops. If they don’t, they’ll just shut off at 15%. It’s how batteries work.

    • @marx2k@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      I’ve been using MacBooks for work as a developer for over 15 years. They are ridiculously reliable. Earlier models would have key paint rub off. Mostly cosmetic stuff. But I’ve literally never had one not work.

      I don’t like that you can’t switch out batteries, ram or hard drive anymore.

      Also, they’re not cheap so for personal use I don’t buy apple products (especially since I don’t want to switch from an android to an apple ecosysten) but its to the point where if work tried to make me use a Dell windows laptop for my daily driver id go find another job. That’s how much I like the MacBook pro.