- I use TurboTax because it's helpful, but I'm not happy or proud to use it (because it shouldn't need to exist).
- I use TikTok, but it doesn't make me feel good because I know I'm exposing myself to manipulation and data privacy concerns.
- I drive a [REDACTED] car, but it doesn't make me feel good because I always feel scammed when I take it in for maintenance.
I do feel good about my Brother printer, though -- Toner is reasonably priced, and I don't feel like they're trying to squeeze every dime out of me that they can; it's just a good reliable printer that does what I ask it and keeps out of my way otherwise.
I'm interested in all kinds of answers: Software, hardware, services, tools, toys, anything!
It's nice to have a familiar and functional option available for various languages/stacks that I can also use at home, that isn't tied to a particular employer, and which which works on multiple OSes.
One key aspect is that one can use older versions indefinitely, even if the subscription lapses, so I don't feel like my projects or workflow will be "held hostage."
It has exactly 1 button I need to understand to get it to function. The design has not changed in decades - every part they offer spares for.
It's handmade in the Netherlands. US support is based out of Oregon. When you call, a real person answers. It's not cheap, but it's not expensive either - buy a refurbished model and it will make great coffee for a lifetime.
As for tools, I find OpenSSH, Mosh, NSD DNS, Unbound DNS, LFTP, Nginx, HAProxy, Tinc VPN, Firefox and assorted other Linux tools useful on a daily basis.
I honestly cant think of a single digital product that I really even like. More like tolerate because I need it to reasonably exist in our society.
I’ve make my living knowing almost everything about AWS. I like the overall platform. But the company is evil incarnate and I hate everything about the corporate culture (former employee).
I love Slack, notion.io, Google’s NotebookLM and GSuite in general, ChatGPT, VSCode.
Admittedly they mostly stopped making them in the 1980's - but both of mine still work fine.
Topo Design 30L travel backpack. I travel constantly and live out of this pack.
Timbuk2 small messenger bag. Good for carrying iPad and other necessities for working remote, and as a "personal item" if an airline forces me to check my backpack.
Icebreaker merino wool clothes.
I pay for some software. Blink Shell (ssh/mosh client for iPad), Working Copy (git client for iPad), Control-D custom DNS/VPN replacement. I also use TurboTax, and resent paying for it every year, but it does handle everything I need as a freelancer living outside the USA.
Although as a subscription: $1k approx over 10 yrs is $8/m.
m1 macbook - because it is an amazing value
nespresso original coffee maker and pods - because it is a good taste yet quick and low maintenance
recent toyota corolla - because it has everything average inexperienced occasional driver like me needs in a nicely balanced, comfortable and economical to drive package
Yeah, their chairs are pricey. Yeah, I could probably get 90% of the chair for about $1200 less, but that final 10% of the chair I'm buying just does something for me. Maybe it's some kind of placebo, but I haven't found another chair that makes me feel supported like my Embody does.
I also know I got like 12 years of warranty on it, so I see it as, pay $1700 now and hold onto the chair for 12 years or replace a not quite chair with another not quite right chair every few years or so.