3 Desjardins: #Household #spending continued to grow, posting an increase of 1.5%. That said, with weakness across the #labourmarket in Q1, the household #savings rate declined to 3.5% to support that spending #cdnecon #GDP

IMPORTANT UPDATE (/s)

That Camelopardalis champagne glass from this week's episode that isn't to my tastes (tho I do like that rainbow effect)?

Well, you can now get it for ~$325/glass (up from a *paltry* ~$250)!

But remember — champagne not included..

For more on our fav & least fav occurrences of #Camelopardalis in #PopCulture -- check out this week's pod: https://starrytimepodcast.podbean.com/e/camelopardalis-pop-culture-superstar/

đź“· : https://ambelier.com/en/products/camelopardalis-champagne-glass-rainbow-effect-43.html

#glass #Champagne #expensive #household #

UK

The latest news and headlines, featuring real time updates for countries, cities, states, politics, economy, sports, food, culture via Ken's Blogspot

I Spent a Week Recording Myself Doing Chores for Money. Who's the Robot Now?

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Memorial Day Dyson Vacuum Deals: V15 Detect, Gen5Detect, PencilVac On Sale

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Best Vacuum Cleaner (2026): Cordless Vacuums, Robot Vacuums, Dysons

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.wired.com/gallery/the-best-vacuum-cleaner/

The Best Home Security System Is Modular (2026)

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.wired.com/story/simplisafe-rave-2026/

Floor Cleaners: Kärcher FCV 4 vs. AirCraft PowerGlide (vs. Mop & Bucket!)

It’s one of Rob’s Consumer Reports

Being retired, I’m mainly responsible for floor cleaning in the household. We’ve got a Roomba (an early model) and a standard vacuum cleaner (Sebo), but most of our floors are either laminate, floor boards, or tiles, so cleaning them with a mop and bucket was what we did… until it was my job.

About 18 months ago, I bought an AirCraft PowerGlide, which is a floor cleaner and polisher. It has a small capacity for water/floor cleaner and two rotating cleaning heads, with replaceable microfibre cloths. Two came with the machine. You remove the battery to charge it. As you’re cleaning, you can push a button on the adjustable handle, and water/floor cleaner will squirt out of the front. But use sparingly, and the microfibre pads do most of the work. There’s also a light on the front, to illuminate the bit of floor you’re cleaning.

It’s quite efficient, quick and easy to use, and the floor usually looks quite clean after you’re done. It’s not great at getting into corners and narrow spaces and the battery life is a bit shit. Usually enough to clean the downstairs and the bathroom, but always needs a charge when you’re done.

I’ve been quite happy with it, but then I saw the Kärcher FCV 3 and the FCV 4. We need something to clean the ceramic tiled floors at our place in France, so… There was a special offer, which meant the more advanced FCV 4 model was cheaper than the FCV 3, so I ordered one.

(It arrived yesterday, delivered by DHL, who delivered fully seven hours later than their email said they would. Slow handclap to that.)

Quite frankly, if you have hard floors to clean, the Kärcher is a game changer. They’re a well known Garden and Outdoors brand, and a lot of people will have one of their pressure washers.

The FCV 4 is a vacuum, and it’s a mop. It has a rotating microfibre roller (like a paint roller), separate water tanks for clean and dirty water, and a self-cleaning/charging station.

It’s delivered with a bottle of Natural floor cleaner (which has no nasty chemicals), and a multi-surface roller, but you can also buy replacement rollers specially designed for stone floors, or for pets. (That said, it looks as if the pet roller isn’t [yet?] available to order.) Other cleaning fluids are available: I ordered a bottle of Multi-Purpose/Universal, but there are also cleaners for waxed wood floors and sealed wood floors, depending on your needs.

The FCV 4 has a larger battery than the FCV 3, and also a built-in sensor, so if you use it on Auto mode, it adjusts its cleaning, depending on the surface, and works harder if it detects dirt. You can also manually switch modes, and there is a Dry mode for carpets/rugs and a Stairs mode.

The battery charges quite slowly and runs down alarmingly fast. Alarming, I think, only because the display is so bright and large! Actually, there’s enough juice to clean the whole house, upstairs and down.

Once you’re charged up, it’s easy to use. First fill the clean water tank, and add just half a capful of cleaning fluid. The bottles are 500ml, so the stuff should last a long time. Put the tank back in the machine, switch it on using the button at the top of the handle (nothing happens, but the lights come on), and then rest your foot on the base, pull the handle back, and it starts working.

The beauty of the roller and vacuum system is that it both cleans and dries as it goes. And because it’s a vacuum, it sucks up solid dirt, too, which means you don’t have to vacuum the floor before you wet clean it. It’s a one stop shop. Dirty water goes into a separate tank, so you’re not just spreading it over the floor. And because it’s sucking up water as it goes, the floor is only a little bit wet and dries very quickly. Anyone in a household knows that feeling of not being able to enter a room until the floor is dry. The floor dries almost immediately.

When the dirty water tank is full, the machine stops and alerts you. And, boy, is that water dirty. That floor you thought looked fairly clean? Oof. You can empty the tank and clean it with the provided brush. There are filters too, which can be cleaned when you’re finished, but they need to be dry before they go back in. Because we have a long haired cat, there was a lot of cat fur in the dirty water! Even though you’d have thought the floor was fairly clean to start with.

Battery indicator: 23%, not Error 2!After self-cleaning

But now it’s clean. And the water you’re pouring away is black. If you still have more to do, you top up the clean water again and go. As I said, we did the whole downstairs and then the upstairs, on mixed surfaces: linoleum tiles, laminate, stone tiles, wooden floorboards. Sitting where I am just now, the stone tiled floor is visibly lighter and brighter, even though I ran the AirCraft over it last Friday.

So we have a clear winner.

But there’s more: put the FCV 4 back on its charging cradle, top up the clean water tank, and hit the button for self cleaning. Over about 90 seconds, it spins and cleans its roller, and fills the dirty tank with another measure of black water. Should you need to, however, you can also chuck the roller into the washing machine, and the water tank can be put in the dishwasher (without its filters).

It’s great. Highly recommended. And you can tell it’s great, because my OH, who had absolutely no interest in using the AirCraft PowerGlide, dived right in with the Kärcher FCV 4. I imagine after you’ve used this a couple of times, your floors will be really clean. Next time I drop a fish pie all over the kitchen, maybe I’ll just eat it off the floor.

#cleaning #Family #FCV4 #FCVSeries #FCV4 #FloorCleaners #Home #Household #Kärcher #life #lifestyle #VacuumMops #WetAndDryCleaner

Post-it Notes: the glue failure that turned into a desk essential

A small pad of yellow Post-It notes. Photo by Erik Breedon (DangApricot), Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0.

Dear Cherubs, the Post-it Note did not arrive like a grand corporate triumph. It arrived like a lab mistake that lingered long enough to become useful, which is basically how half of human progress gets dressed up after the fact. In 1968, 3M scientist Spencer Silver was trying to make a stronger adhesive, but instead produced one with tiny spheres that stuck lightly and could be peeled apart again.

THE ACCIDENT

That is the charming part: Silver did not invent “super glue” so much as he invented the opposite of disappointment in a bottle. The adhesive was too weak for the job he originally wanted, but it had a strange talent for sticking without making a mess, and 3M kept the idea alive while it looked for a real use. Because apparently even failures need a business plan.

Then Art Fry stepped in with the kind of everyday irritation that changes history. In 1974, Fry was singing in his church choir and fed up with bookmarks falling out of his hymnal, so he tried Silver’s adhesive on paper and built a bookmark that stayed put, peeled off cleanly, and did not ruin the page. Not exactly a thunderbolt from the heavens, but it was close enough for stationery.

From there, the idea quietly grew teeth. 3M spent years refining the product and manufacturing process, because apparently even a sticky note needs a long runway before the world agrees it was inevitable. The company test-marketed the removable notes as Press ’n Peel in 1977 in four cities, then relaunched them nationally in 1980 under the Post-it name.

THE COMEBACK

By the time Post-it Notes hit the mainstream, they had become the sort of object people stop noticing precisely because they use them constantly. According to the National Inventors Hall of Fame, Post-it Notes later ranked among the five best-selling office products in the U.S., which is a decent reward for an invention that started out by refusing to behave.

That is the real plot twist: the world did not need a perfect glue. It needed a polite one. The sticky little square won because it solved a tiny human problem with almost annoying elegance, and that is often how the best ideas work. As noted by thisclaimer.com, the best origin stories are the ones that sound like a failure until the market shows up and politely proves everyone wrong.

So, yes, the Post-it story is basically a cautionary tale for anyone who thinks a failed experiment is the end of the road. Sometimes it is just the opening scene. The office supply aisle owes a lot to one weak adhesive, one annoyed choir singer, and one very patient company willing to let a weird idea sit around until it became indispensable.

Sources:
3M — https://www.3m.com/3M/en_US/consumer-us/stories/full-story/?storyid=e9f444d3-a5c5-46f1-a34b-082ff275aa7d
3M history — https://www.3m.com/3M/en_US/about-3m/history/
National Inventors Hall of Fame: Spencer Silver — https://www.invent.org/inductees/spencer-silver
National Inventors Hall of Fame: Art Fry — https://www.invent.org/blog/inventors/art-fry-post-it-notes
History.com — https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/april-6/post-it-notes-debut
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com
Wikimedia Commons image — https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:PostItNotePad.JPG

The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #3m #art #artFry #DIY #funFacts #hamRadio #happyAccident #Home #household #inventionStory #office #officeSupplies #postItNotes #productDesign #spencerSilver #stickyNotes #viral #ViralVideo