As the title suggests, trying to find anything in someone else’s kitchen is almost always a frustrating experience. Everyone seems to have a different idea about where to put things.

  • LChitman
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    481 year ago

    The floor being on the bottom is an unofficial standard, at least.

  • @[email protected]
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    181 year ago

    I have a supernatural ability to find the cutlery drawer in any kitchen on the first try. So far I haven’t been able to use my power to solve any crimes but it’s useful anyway.

  • @[email protected]
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    151 year ago

    It’s weird when you expect the kitchen to be set by “align right” and instead everything is set “align left”

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      That’s a nice problem to have, in my kitchen the only option is to “align stuffed to the brim”

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    That‘s true. I remember coming together with my gf back then. Moving into our first department we almost had a fight over the kitchen organization. Our idea of where to put everything was vastly different.

  • megane-kun
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    101 year ago

    And this is true for a whole lot other things, to varying extent: icons on a smartphone home screen, desktop icons/files on a PC/laptop, digital file organization, physical file/book/notes (dis)organization, to name a few.

    We all might agree on a need to keep things organized, but whether or not it’s okay to mix pencils and pens together, whether or not to store them with the write-y bit up, or down, whether or not it’s okay to store sign pens alongside ballpoint pens, and whether they should be write-y bit up, down, or laid to its side. Whether or not it’s okay to just store shirts randomly interspersed with pants, so long as they’re all clean…

    I can go on and on, but the point is that we may agree on the general principles, but there will always be one detail of organization that I’d find horrifyingly wrong, and you are perfectly fine with it.

      • Züri
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        81 year ago

        That’s the neat part. Since lemmy is open there can be a multitude of clients and finally everyone will find one that suits them.

      • megane-kun
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        61 year ago

        Indeed, but I think providing some level of customization usually resolves this to a good extent (ignoring the entire debate of how customizable one app should be), with decent defaults for people who couldn’t be bothered.

        But your point still stands: excluding infinitely-customizable apps (to such an extent in which you might as well write your own), there would be some person out there who’d be “just fine” with it, and not completely satisfied. And if I were an app dev, I’d find a balance between satisfying the most amount of people with the defaults, and allowing more people to be satisfied with customization, all the while keeping myself sane (keeping the amount of effort needed to a humane amount).

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    my kitchen is pretty spartan but it works. a close friend’s kitchen has every gadget you could think of, including a bread maker. she doesn’t use most of them though

    • Froyn
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      61 year ago

      pretty “spartan” - I picture armor on the table and using a spear to get the meatloaf from the oven.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    I have no hard feelings about placement and, unless living alone, tend to leave organization to others. Problem arises, when they change the place of one component and forget to tell me, as I will put the utensil back to its “place” once I find it.