• Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    That’s kinda on you, dude. Nothing is stopping you from subscribing to toothbrush premium with mouth-print authentication. Before you start whining, no, you don’t actually have to listen to the two minutes of ads for sour candy, transmitted directly through your jaw bones. You can always upgrade to add-free. It’s only like $10 per month.

    • Strider@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Toothbrush premium has been sunset and replaced by toothbrush plus by popular customer demand.

      It’s superior features have a newly redesigned the consumer experience. Ads can be skipped. Up to three times to be reviewed at a later date.

      Of course we also have the new ultra premium subscription model for the low price of 9,99 per week where you can submit your ad preferences!

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      10 days ago

      i bought an off brand sonic toothbrush for under 15(with discount from tootheory, amazon) unfortunately they dont sell these anymore. apparently it has all the features of a more expensive sonicare that is usually around 80-100$.

      • Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        Get a load of mistah moneybags over here. Gotta whole $15 to drop on a toothbrush alone. Meanwhile, I get whatever kind of $1.50 manual toothbrush my dentist hands out for free and I gotta brush my teeth like some kinda neanderthal.

  • hanke@feddit.nu
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    11 days ago

    Yeah, this is kind of on you.

    If you spend your money on a “smart” toothbrush, expect it to do “smart” stuff.

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      I have a “smart” toothbrush, I have never logged into it or connected to to anything but the charging block. It still has multiple modes and buzzes when I’ve been brushing a quadrant for 30 seconds.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      10 days ago

      they probably dont look all those reviews online about these, i got curious and most of them said they stopped working, or some part of the smart features becomes defective within a year.

      anything above oral-b 1500 series, you are asking for it. 1500 and below you are just getting the standard rotating toothbrush with no smart gimmicks, and they last alot longer too. plus, oral-b makes thier money from the toothbrush heads, its every 3 months replacements, but the official replacements heads are expensive. if you are buying the IO series you will have to get those.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 days ago

        I got a Phillips Sonicare a few years back and it’s pretty nice.

        Wouldn’t even know how to begin to connect the thing to a computer or the internet. Certainly never had to log into anything.

    • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      11 days ago

      Nah.

      Like it often tends to be, the mistake wasn’t the concept itself, but rather letting some of the worst and least qualified people get away with any fuckery they want in the neverending quest for short term profits and shareholder dividends.

      The IOT could DEFINITELY be a vehicle for actual convenience with no drawbacks for consumers if we would just have and enforce laws and regulations favoring their experience over the profits of misery-makers.

      • not_IO@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 days ago

        i agree with your philosophy bit i still think the instability thay comes from the added complexity always outweighs the use

      • hark@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        The convenience isn’t worth the downside. It’s just a gaping security hole and data sink for corporations to suck from. Eventually the company will stop supporting the product and you’re stuck having to use an outdated app and maintain your own copy (if that’s allowed). You can roll your own system, but then all that work is placed on you, and for what kind of convenience? To remotely control devices or sync states to provide a minor convenience when it works and a major headache when it does not?

    • AlJones@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      To collect data for advertisers and health officials. To add a subscription to turning on your tooth brush.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      10 days ago

      too collect data, and make it look like you are buying a bougie product, because it has all these features. some off-brand ones that are way cheaper has the same thing already.

      you usually dont encounter these ones unless you are paying alot for it, like 80-200$+ for the expensive lines of oral-b.

    • Pacattack57@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      To adequately measure your brushing habits and tell you which teeth you are missing or not brushing enough?

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    I gave up on electric toothbrushes. My dentist recommended them, I used them, got two infections in six months where I had no issues for years. Returned to normal brushes three years ago, no more infections.

    • Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      They are definitely, without a question, much more effective at cleaning your teeth. My guess is coincidence vs. you had a poor technique when it came to using them

      • favoredponcho@lemmy.zip
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        10 days ago

        Or bought a bad model, some electric toothbrushes just have a vibrating handle and that doesn’t transfer much to actual brushing benefit. I do notice the ones where the brush actually spins or oscillates make a huge difference.

        • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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          10 days ago

          i noticed the offbrand ones claiming very high rpm, are likely not true, or just oscillates. also sonic and rotating are somewhat different too. some off-brand sonic ones are good too, epsecially the ones where you can set the intensity.

    • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      not all electric brushes are made equal. my dad’s best friend is an oral surgeon so i know a fair bit about teef

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      10 days ago

      that doesnt seem like the cause, my teeth were really way cleaner and efficiently brushed than with a manual. with a manual you can definitely go too hard on the enamel if you are aggressive. electrics now have sensors that detect pressure. are rinsing the brush heads before and after using them? or you using it way after 3-4 months? or you using it on your gums or too much.

  • ikt@aussie.zone
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    11 days ago

    Wait isn’t this like an escalator that’s broken just becoming stairs?

    A smart toothbrush that’s broken just becomes a toothbrush

  • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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    10 days ago

    it must be those smart-lines of oral-b that are very expensive, like 100-200$+ the ones less than 70 wont do this. i heard the bougie ones are quite flimsy and prone to breaking, because theres more complicated parts and now electronics.

    • d00ery@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Can confirm! I bought one on sale which never connected to Bluetooth on my Samsung android (though documentation suggested it should.) connected to partners iPhone though. Anyway I used for less than 3 months before it stopped charging. I then went back to using the £25 I’d had for many years.

      • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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        10 days ago

        i was looking online reviews when i was looking for electric toothbrush, almost everyone that has smart-features including off brand tend to be defective, one way or another. its either the blue tooth, the sensor, it stops rotating, charging,etc. replacement heads are expensive if you are buying the OFFICIAL heads. i bought ones from ironically germany( alittle big for the american version of the actual toothbrush, it works and it last longer too as a replacement, apparently only the american ones get yellow and shorter before 3 months. while the ones from the official german versions dont. the americans have to be replaced every 3months.

        the one i bought was the oralb1000 series, it was 39.99usd at the time(i noticed this color was noticbally cheaper both instore too, shouldve gotten another one jus tin case.) they sell the other colors which was more expensive and never on sale for some reason.

    • Hugucinogens@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      10 days ago

      Drink verification can to log in to customer support to ask.

      Answer: 10 out of 10 of our Marketing Department Experts agree, Beverage™ is Healthy and Healing (legally defined as part of a balanced diet and lifestyle, serving size 19.2 ml per day)

      Thank you for using customer support. Please drink verification can to Rate your experience, because we care about what you think.

      Also, drink verification can to join our Giveaway Competition for one free week of sleep in Pear’s Premium iRestPods! Competition is for which user can get the most viral clip of themselves, doing the #BeverageCanGuzzleChallenge!

    • Zron@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Having been near a horse before, I’ll take my chances with the microplastics.

      Vile creatures.

        • spankinspinach@sh.itjust.works
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          10 days ago

          I know it’s a common saying but I take issue with the clever in the middle haha. I’ve been around enough of them to know they’re dumb as fence posts, with a slight advantage to the post

          • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            Just the other day there was a comment about a horse going crazy to the point of death because a paper lantern landed in its pasture. While the thread overall did convince me that releasing them is an asshole thing to do (another comment mentioned one burnt down a hay barn near them and it clicked just how stupid it is to just fly a candle surrounded in paper out to land where it will), it didn’t do horse intelligence reputation any favours.

      • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Yes, every time a horse needs to be groomed, it’s a death sentence for them. Well, some horses think they coulda’ had died. It coulda’ happened that way you know. But they all somehow survive.

        Interestingly enough, or not, at one time horse hair was the most popular material to make all kinds of brushes out. There were millions of horses, and they all needed to have their manes and tails groomed and cut several times a year. So there was a renewable and never ending supply. People were happy, and the horses were happy.

        But, then came WW1. And along with all the guns, artillery, and ammunition needed to feed these engines death and destruction, copious amounts of other far more mundane items were also required by soldiers. And one of those mundane items were shaving brushes.

        Soldiers are required to shave every day no matter what. So that meant every solider needed a shaving kit. This meant the military needed to supply a razor, blades, shaving soap, and a shaving brush to every solider. And the cheapest and most abundant brush to buy in bulk, was horse hair. But there soon was a problem.

        Turns out all that patriotic horses were being sent to war to get killed just like all the men. And that in the western world, horse hair quickly was in short supply. And the soldiers still needed shaving brushes.

        So, the brush factories started importing horse hair brushes from the Far East, mainly China. And because the Chinese either didn’t understand that horse hair needs to be sterilized, or it was just Chinese businessmen being Chinese, they skipped that step and didn’t tell anyone. And soon soldiers were being infected with tetanus and dying at an alarming rate. It is one thing to send your soldiers to die in the face of machine-gun fire, and a whole 'nother thing to waste them dying from tetanus infected shaving brushes instead. So they panicked switched to boar bristle brushes instead.

        And so great was the fear of cheap imported horse hair shaving brushes from the Orient, that the US passed a Federal law banning the importation of horse hair brushes or horse hair and even the manufacture of those brushes in the US. A prohibition that lasted until recently. Other nations enacted similar bans or implemented strict rules regarding in manufacture and sale. And so horse hair shaving brushes faded from consumers minds.

        The last horse hair shaving brush manufacturer in the west, an old Spanish company-- Vie-Long, finally quit making them a few years ago now. (I own and regularly use 3 of them). So new horse hair shaving brushes are now extinct. And that includes the rare and heavily fetishized horse hair tooth brushes.

        Fortunately, you can get synthetic shaving knots and tooth brushes that very good these days. And so people with those peculiar fetishes can continue their private kinks.

        • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          The last horse hair shaving brush manufacturer in the west, an old Spanish company-- Vie-Long, finally quit making them a few years ago now

          WHAT. i have been lazy and wanting to buy a new one for my skull and not doing that. what about horsehair shoe polish brushes? I just like the feeling of hair on my skull. plastic brushes don’t clean right.

          • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            Yeah, you’ve been lazy along with me. I wanted another one of their shaving brushes. I think they still offer badger hair shaving brushes. For real natural brushes you have your choice of either badger hair or boar bristle. Badger is the most popular for shaving brushes followed by boar which is stiffer and can feel “scritchier” if you are looking for that. Though it takes a bit of use to get a good boar brush’s bristles to start splitting at the tips and then it provides a soft feel.

            Those people that dislike the fact that the boar and badger need to be all in on making a shaving brush, favor the synthetics. And I do have a couple that I find pretty nice. But there is a difference in the feel between natural hair/bristle and plastic.

      • ryannathans@aussie.zone
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        10 days ago

        Is this a meme? The hair is collected from grooming horses. It would be so uneconomical to kill horses for something they produce far more effortlessly than milk