My mother's washing machine is breaking down, and she lives close enough that I'm washing all of her laundry.
Now, I like being able to fill more loads and wash things more often, rather than have them accumulate until the laundry basket is overflowing, so I'm not encouraging her to buy a new machine (an attempt at repairing hers has already been done, and failed).
My real question is: should I do the proper #victorian thing and embroider my husband's initials on all of our household items? should I do a radical feminist thing and embroider my own initials¹? And what should I do with the bedsheet that already has my great-grandfather initials on it?
¹ or rather design. which has the advantage of having a form that is extremely easy and quick to embroider, and I already use on my conference t-shirts that are identical to @Diego Roversi 's ones :D
reshared this
Lars Wirzenius
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Ownership of things changes over time. May I suggest you embroider a UUID and set up a database or spreadsheet of who owns which item?
(Joking.)
Elena ``of Valhalla'' likes this.
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Lars Wirzenius • •Lars Wirzenius
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •It just so happens that I've been thinking about serial numbers for my own garments lately.
Example: say I have three identical white dress shirts. Which one is the oldest? How long have I had it? How many times have I used it?
Without distinguishing elements this kind of thing is difficult.
Clearly, the world needs detailed inventory management for wardrobes. I shall make that my next startup.
like this
Elena ``of Valhalla'', Jim Tittsler e clonejo 2021-W42-3T13:37Z like this.
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Lars Wirzenius • •@Lars Wirzenius a quick test told me that a qr code for a lesana id with reasonable settings is 28 × 28 squares/pixels.
but maybe there should also be a prefix to tell the qr-code decoding application that this is a lesana id, and a collection identifier. which is still missing, in lesana, I should probably add it.
And then there is the whole “letting the QR decoding application know that that kind of code should be opened with lesana”, of course.
Lars Wirzenius reshared this.
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • •anarcat
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to anarcat • •@anarcat so the qrcode would have to be read by the same application that already knows about the inventory, right?
/me looks in a direction precisely perpendicular to the line towards @Fabio
anarcat
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Elena ``of Valhalla'' likes this.
Elena ``of Valhalla''
Unknown parent • •@Fabio @Lars Wirzenius of course that's what I would do.
Do you thing that the short id would be enough, or should I embroider the full id for safety? I'd thing the latter.
Also, human readable, or some embroidery-optimized encoding?
rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •@fabrixxm @liw
Hint from my granny (born at the end of 1800) who for a while worked as laundress in the Po river…
Two threads of different colors, like red and blue, will help to separate the things.
A "paper DB" with names and two threads of the same colors was enough.
Elena ``of Valhalla'' likes this.
Lars Wirzenius reshared this.
Ángel
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •I suggest to embroid QR codes to URLs of a domain you control.
CC: @diegor@social.gl-como.it
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua • •@Rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua
like @Fabio said, this is too practical, there isn't enough overengineering, it can't work (I mean, it would work as a way to separate the laundry, not as whatever it is that we're doing here) :D
Ángel likes this.
Elena ``of Valhalla''
Unknown parent • •@Fabio no, you were right at the margin of my field of vision, I wasn't looking at you!
but text only lesana can work with something like zbarcam through the shell, Collector would need some QR-code reading of its own :D