First World Problems: Share the Silliest Things That Bug You!

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The discussion revolves around various "silly problems" that, despite their trivial nature, cause frustration. Participants share experiences such as the annoyance of tissues not dispensing properly, typing errors leading to lost text, and difficulties with packaging, particularly hard-to-open plastic. Other grievances include software prompts that disrupt workflow, slow internet connections, and issues with customer service calls. The conversation touches on everyday inconveniences like toilet paper shortages, ineffective product packaging, and the challenges of using technology, such as touchscreen lag and autocorrect errors. Many participants express a sense of camaraderie in sharing these minor irritations, highlighting how even small frustrations can impact daily life. The thread reflects a light-hearted acknowledgment of first-world problems, with humor woven throughout the complaints.
  • #251
dlgoff said:
She my use this technique when the ankle heals. Just sayin'.

I am not to sure about that. The master remote that controls the cable, the TV, The VCR, and five or three other things has her confused. The sleep timer can only be set on the remote for the TV and it doesn't turn the cable box off. She tries to turn the TV back on by pressing the ALL ON button on the master remote. That does turn the TV back on but at the same time it turns the cable box off. This results in her getting into a self generated first world tizzy.

I sat down with her this morning and explained that if the green light is lit on the cable box, the box is on. There is no light lit on the cable box when it is off. If the red light is lit on the TV the TV is off. If there is no light lit on the TV the TV is on. :D I explained to her with care and in a gentle tone that all she has to do is pick up the master remote, then press the TV button, and then press the power button. "Do not press the ALL ON button" I whispered in her ear.

Ongoing first world dilemma in Tucson[/B]
 
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  • #252
edward said:
I am not to sure about that. The master remote that controls the cable, the TV, The VCR, and five or three other things has her confused. The sleep timer can only be set on the remote for the TV and it doesn't turn the cable box off. She tries to turn the TV back on by pressing the ALL ON button on the master remote. That does turn the TV back on but at the same time it turns the cable box off. This results in her getting into a self generated first world tizzy.

I sat down with her this morning and explained that if the green light is lit on the cable box, the box is on. There is no light lit on the cable box when it is off. If the red light is lit on the TV the TV is off. If there is no light lit on the TV the TV is on. :D I explained to her with care and in a gentle tone that all she has to do is pick up the master remote, then press the TV button, and then press the power button. "Do not press the ALL ON button" I whispered in her ear.

Ongoing first world dilemma in Tucson[/B]
The other day you seemed like my unknown twin brother and now it sounds like we are married to the same woman, LOL :D
 
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  • #253
edward said:
I am not to sure about that. The master remote that controls the cable, the TV, The VCR, and five or three other things has her confused. The sleep timer can only be set on the remote for the TV and it doesn't turn the cable box off. She tries to turn the TV back on by pressing the ALL ON button on the master remote. That does turn the TV back on but at the same time it turns the cable box off. This results in her getting into a self generated first world tizzy.

I sat down with her this morning and explained that if the green light is lit on the cable box, the box is on. There is no light lit on the cable box when it is off. If the red light is lit on the TV the TV is off. If there is no light lit on the TV the TV is on. :D I explained to her with care and in a gentle tone that all she has to do is pick up the master remote, then press the TV button, and then press the power button. "Do not press the ALL ON button" I whispered in her ear.

Ongoing first world dilemma in Tucson[/B]
RonL said:
The other day you seemed like my unknown twin brother and now it sounds like we are married to the same woman, LOL :D

I think your wives are my girlfriend. Yesterday she wanted to install her new Sony Blue-Ray player to here existing Sony system. Had a hell of a time explaining and when I asked for a DVD to test it out, it didn't work. Spent an hour going through a hundred menu items while listing to her reading the directions. Turned out she had put a software game disk in the player. :headbang: At least I'm not married. :oldeyes:
 
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  • #254
dlgoff said:
I think your wives are my girlfriend. :headbang: At least I'm not married. :oldeyes:

And just how does that let you off the hook ?:rolleyes::D
 
  • #255
RonL said:
And just how does that let you off the hook ?:rolleyes::D
It doesn't. But it probably has a little to do with how much time I spend here.
 
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  • #256
Singing magnets!

These are awesome little toys. They're ellipsoidal, allowing them to easily change their orientation. If you toss them in the air near each other, they'll attract each other, colliding and vibrating with a cool little buzz. If you lay them on the table, just far enough that they don't roll into each other, pushing the end of one will set both magnets dancing with each other. Plus the fun little magic trick where one magnet is hidden in your hand and you mysteriously set the other magnet mysteriously dancing in response to you merely passing your closed hand over it. Etc. Do this at work all day and your coworkers will demand your desk be relocated to the parking lot.

It's great fun for the 5-year-old grandson, too! He'll play with them all through lunch at the restaraunt if you let him. The only way to get him to stop playing with the magnets and to eat his lunch is to take the magnets from him and put them in your pocket...

... which, unfortunately, is the same pocket you put your wallet in...

... which means by time lunch is over, every card you own has been corrupted and will no longer work...

... which, in a world where cash is practically obsolete, one can find themselves with no way to pay for lunch!

Actually, most experienced cashiers can deal with this by manually entering your credit card information into the computer, similar to on-line sales. But erasing every card in your wallet at once? Absolutely priceless!

And, for the record, this hasn't actually happened to me. But I did send my grandson home with a pair of these without warning his parents about them, so I'm patiently waiting...
 
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  • #257
BobG said:
Do this at work all day and your coworkers will demand your desk be relocated to the parking lot.

This actually happened to me. My next-office-neighbor would click-buzz his in his pocket, several times a day. It got to a point where all I would have to say is, "Damn it, John!" and he would apologize and stop.

It's great fun for the 5-year-old grandson, too! He'll play with them all through lunch at the restaraunt if you let him. The only way to get him to stop playing with the magnets and to eat his lunch is to take the magnets from him and put them in your pocket...

... which, unfortunately, is the same pocket you put your wallet in...

... which means by time lunch is over, every card you own has been corrupted and will no longer work...

... which, in a world where cash is practically obsolete, one can find themselves with no way to pay for lunch!

Actually, most experienced cashiers can deal with this by manually entering your credit card information into the computer, similar to on-line sales. But erasing every card in your wallet at once? Absolutely priceless!

And, for the record, this hasn't actually happened to me. But I did send my grandson home with a pair of these without warning his parents about them, so I'm patiently waiting...

It would be well deserved :devil:.
 
  • #258
First world problem: remote controls. Do we control them, or do they control us?
Here is my collection of remote controls. I challenge PFers to beat my number of controls (11), I'm sure some could do that :D. The big one to the right is a fun one I found in a second hand store, it's huge (ca 13 cm x 26 cm). I have been thinking about rebuilding it into a controller for computers, but I haven't got around to do it yet.

16157953996_a15fae7a62_o.jpg
 
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  • #259
DennisN said:
I challenge PFers to beat my number of controls (11)
Must resist trip to garage...
 
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  • #260
Borg said:
Must resist trip to garage...
Don't resist! :w
 
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  • #261
Why resist ?
 
  • #262
BobG said:
But erasing every card in your wallet at once? Absolutely priceless!
A colleague did that once. The magnet was a bit larger, but the concept was the same.
Luckily, we do not live in a world where cash is practically obsolete. The US is just a small part of the world.
 
  • #263
Today's first world problem. Went to buy a bag of chips marked 75 cents and the guy tells me 90 cents. I said "15 cents tax?" to which he replied that the sign was wrong. When I returned the chips, he actually got offended. He was also the manager and made no effort to change or remove the incorrect price. I guess that he counts on most people not paying attention.
 
  • #264
Danger said:
Don't worry about it. If you're that immersed in your tech gadgets, you'll probably never have a chance to reproduce, let alone have grandchildren.

I have learned from personal experience that this is not an effective form of birth control.
 
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  • #265
Not first world per se, but...

When the number of sausages don't match the number of buns.
 
  • #266
Psinter said:
Not first world per se, but...

When the number of sausages don't match the number of buns.
Not sure but I think the hot dog / bun problem was brought up earlier in the thread.
 
  • #267
phinds said:
Not sure but I think the hot dog / bun problem was brought up earlier in the thread.
It wasn't, I searched :smile:.
 
  • #268
Psinter said:
It wasn't, I searched :smile:.
Darn. I was sure it was but didn't search. My bad.
 
  • #269
It's okay. :)
 
  • #270
phinds said:
Darn. I was sure it was but didn't search. My bad.
Sounds like a first world problem phinds.
 
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  • #271
Working on vehicles requires two sets of tools, standard and metric. Geez engineers, just pick one.
 
  • #272
Geez engineers, just pick metric.

Fixed that for you. 95% of the world population uses SI, 5% uses imperial units. Which one would you call "standard"?
 
  • #273
First World Problem: I am in need of a cat safe computer keyboard.
 
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  • #274
Psinter said:
Not first world per se, but...

When the number of sausages don't match the number of buns.
What I really don't understand is why they haven't taken it the logical next steps.

1. Add cheese slices to the mix. 8 buns plus 12 dogs plus 14 cheese slices means they have to buy enough for 168 complete dogs.

2. Use prime numbers. 7 dogs , 11 buns and 13 cheeses means they have to buy enough for 1,001.
 
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  • #276
mfb said:
Which one would you call "standard"?

The machines I work on are mostly Whitworth, BSW, BSF... that's a first world problem: "I LIKE old stuff..."
 
  • #277
Borg said:
to which he replied that the sign was wrong.
Which is illegal, by the way.
You were within your legal rights to demand to pay only the advertized price.
 
  • #278
Pet pee'ves :)
 

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