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  • I can think of a few that have served me well:

    • A good laser printer: $100 plus a few reams of paper have covered my printing needs for over a decade (and going)
    • Wool socks for the winter. Makes dropping the thermostat a degree or two much less unpleasant
    • A good, 100W USB-C PD charger. I've got a few, and they'll charge/power pretty much any of my devices (including laptop).
    • 100% laser printer. My Brother laser paid for itself the first time I bought a set of cheap toner for it. I don't understand why people buy/rent inkjet ripoffs.

      • I spotted one on the curb and thought it was an Epson at first glance. Took another look and saw it was a BW Brother laser the internet nerds are always going on about. I took it inside and dried the water off from the rain that just started, and was ready to take it back out to the curb where I found it whenever I discovered why it was put outside.

        That thing is rock solid.

        My girlfriend insists on having her Canon inkjet for color, and that thing bugs out at least once a month. Her mom's HP has been a nightmare for me to deal with over the time she's had it. This trash Brother has been the best home printer and scanner I've had in my near 30 years of computing. It's still going on the toner it came with, not that I print much. Any wifi issues have not been related to the printer. It prints and scans great. From what I understand, third party toner should be no issue when the time comes as there's no chip.

        The hype is real on these Brothers.

    • I just had to replace my 15 y/o Samsung laser printer because I couldn’t find toner carts for it anymore. Nor would it work with anything but windows. Last time I found toner about 3 years ago I bought the last two the website had and they finally ran dry and no matter how much I shook them gaps were present. Laser printing is the best.

  • I have recently needed to travel for work and my duffel bag was a pain in the butt to carry around the airport. All the rolling bags I saw for purchase didn't seem well made and were pretty expensive while somehow not utilizing all of the available overhead space. Even well known brands like swiss gear seems to have critical break points on their luggage. The last trip I made, I noticed that all of the flight crew used the same brand of luggage that looked very well made and was reinforced in all the right areas. So I looked it up and found that their non-commercial line was just as shitty as everything else I was seeing, but their flight crew line was top tier... But only flight crew could buy it. So I found a website that would sell it to me! $240 for a suitcase that looks like it will last my lifetime and fits the exact dimensions of the overhead space saving me $40 per trip to not check the bag (my company doesn't cover checking bags). Return on "investment" is 6 flights or 3 round trips. The brand is Travelpro for anyone wondering. And the site I purchased from is mypilotstore.com. They even sell spare parts such as wheels/bearings or leather handles. Super happy with my purchase!!

  • If you're into miniatures, be it for painting, playing games that use them, or just showing them off, a resin 3D printer. Make Games Workshop and Hasbro pull their hairs out and have fun with a huge amount of stuff you can print!

    A nice Elegoo Saturn 2 or Halot Mage printer + 2 liters of resin are enough to print well over 400 miniatures of 28mm-32mm scales. Even if you account the pre and post print work (putting supports, cleaning the print), it quickly becomes cheaper than buying boxes of plastic minis. The learning curve, amount of things to account for before printing and maintenance are all significantly smaller than a filament printer

  • Decent stainless steel 'silverware' that doesn't easily bend will last a lifetime isn't very expensive for a one time purchase, and can be really cheap to pick up used if you aren't too picky.

  • Cables.

    Like, just buy a bunch of USB-C cables; they're cheap. Maybe some HDMI and audio ones. Maybe splurge for the braided ones if you want to be fancy. It saves you from the problem of only having one that works that you have to keep juggling around, or not having one on hand when you need it. Different lengths and colours as well, so you don't have super long ones going all over the place, and can distinguish them at a glance.

  • A 3D Printer and CAD software, especially if you can get around free software.

    Break a plastic thingy, why spend $50 on a replacement when you can make one. On no that broke, learn why and make it better.

    I’m at the point where I can 3D print small tablet cases, and it’s funny watching the included injection moulded accessories fall apart, while mine is going strong.

    It’s not for everyone, and there is a skill gap that’s bigger than most people are comfortable jumping. But if you have the desire/want to learn CAD or 3D printing, it will pay for itself, if you use it right.

  • Toyota Tacoma. Is literally worth more now than when I bought it. My model has bluetooth but none of the "always on tracking" many vehicles come with after. Subaru Forester. It had a recall for a head gasket something or other that required an entire new engine. Got that done at 115k miles, basically a new car for nothing.

    Le Crueset set for about $600 15 years ago. We have cooked hundreds of meals with them. Same with cast iron and stainless copper core pots and pans. Immersion blender (corded) as well. Stove top espresso percolator is so cheap and nice if you aren't a daily espresso drinker. Having that one cup on a rainy afternoon or after dinner is a treat.

    If you like grilled/bbq/smoked food, a nice grill will last years if you take care of it. I had a side by side gas and charcoal/wood grill for the last 11 years. Heavy use and lack of replacement parts finally killed it. I could cook full plates for 20+ people off that thing or just a couple of chicken breasts for a quick dinner. I have a pretty cheap but capable gas stainless grill and a santa maria bbq now. They work fine, but not quite as convenient as the all in one.

    A really good mattress, solid bed frame, nice pillows, and high thread count cotton sheets are worth every penny. I didn't get all that together until I was middle aged and I really wished I had done it sooner. My back is like "wtf dude, we could have had this the whole time ?!"

    If you do any woodworking, 3d printing, making stuff, art etc? Space. A space to do all that it. Wether it is a hobby or cottage industry, you will need dedicated space to make your mess. I've seen people trying to DIY in apartments on youtube and its just so bad. Not to mention dangerous. Fumes, fire, trip hazard, mdf dust, etc. Find a place to house all that nonsense outside of your living space.

    And if you make digital art, photoshop, draw, anything that makes you hate a mouse for input. A Wacom tablet screen is worth it. Not an iPad, not a Surface all in one, not some knock off clone from Ali Express...but a crazy expensive Wacom. The regular tablets are okay, but drawing on the screen is almost impossible to come back from. I bought mine in 2009 for $3k and still use it daily.

  • This is highly individual, and I have some expensive products to add....

    A good dedicated camera, since I got my first proper camera back in 2017 (a Lumix GX80) I have taken tens of thousands of photos per year.

    Last spring I upgraded to a Lumix S5 with few fantastic lenses and it has been awesome, and with my S5 and 100-400mm sigma lens I have goten plenty of great photos.

    To me my cameras are in my top three ever best purchases, all the things I have went snd done because I wanted to take photos have more than paid for the money invested, perhaps not in direct money for me, but in inspiration and enjoyment.

    I am planning on getting the Sony A7 IV as a complement to my S5 as the A7 IV has much better and faster autofocus, I love my S5 for it's amazing colors, UI and overall performance, but as I often go planespotting I need better and faster autofocus.

    Damn, that was a lot of text about cameras....

    Time to talk about cars...

    I bought my first car last summer after getting my license back in 2022 and living alone without a car for 8 years.

    It is a 2021 SEAT Leon FR PHEV hatchback and being able to get to interesting places out in the country to get cool photos have been fantastic and really improved my mental health.

    It was very lightly used, and has enough performance for me without being exsessive.

    I mostly drive on battery and charge up once a week, since I live in an aparment complex we only have shared charging infrastructure, but since it is a PHEV I can still go far when I need to without worrying about chargers.

160 comments