Ideas
Moderator: Jon O'Neill
Ideas
I've just written to Kleenex.
Current tissue box technology has made getting tissues easier than ever before - the next tissue pops out a little flap in the top when you take one. You no longer have to reach into the box, or pick it up or anything to get at the tissues. Which is great. Unfortunately, it also means there is pretty much no difference between taking the first tissue from the box and the last - and I constantly find that I'm surprised and irritated to find my tissue box is empty, and now I've got to sit at my desk for hours with snot streaming down my face before I can go out and get a new one.
So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
Please tell me about ideas you have or have had, and if, like me, you've been mentally unstable/bored enough to actually write to a manufacturer.
Current tissue box technology has made getting tissues easier than ever before - the next tissue pops out a little flap in the top when you take one. You no longer have to reach into the box, or pick it up or anything to get at the tissues. Which is great. Unfortunately, it also means there is pretty much no difference between taking the first tissue from the box and the last - and I constantly find that I'm surprised and irritated to find my tissue box is empty, and now I've got to sit at my desk for hours with snot streaming down my face before I can go out and get a new one.
So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
Please tell me about ideas you have or have had, and if, like me, you've been mentally unstable/bored enough to actually write to a manufacturer.
Re: Ideas
I get excema inside my ear, but no over the counter eardrops/lotions/potions seem to ease the itch. I was even recommended olive oil, but that didn't work either.
So, what happens is, eventually it gets so itchy I have to scratch, so it gets infected, so I get an antibiotic ear spray prescription from the doctor.
Now, the itch goes almost straight away with this spray, i.e. it's not just clearing the infection as it happens too quickly for that. I keep meaning to write to the manufacturers to float the idea that they market an over the counter version without the antibiotic ingredients, but with the anti-itching ingredients,
BTW, after many years running a household, I find that the easiest way not to run out of things is to replace them when you start the last one, not wait till it's nearly finished. Hope you're soon over your cold. My eldest son and my daughter are still recovering from a stinker of a bug.
So, what happens is, eventually it gets so itchy I have to scratch, so it gets infected, so I get an antibiotic ear spray prescription from the doctor.
Now, the itch goes almost straight away with this spray, i.e. it's not just clearing the infection as it happens too quickly for that. I keep meaning to write to the manufacturers to float the idea that they market an over the counter version without the antibiotic ingredients, but with the anti-itching ingredients,
BTW, after many years running a household, I find that the easiest way not to run out of things is to replace them when you start the last one, not wait till it's nearly finished. Hope you're soon over your cold. My eldest son and my daughter are still recovering from a stinker of a bug.
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Re: Ideas
Yeah, it's mainly my desk at work though, and I have precious little room as it is without having two of everything.Julie T wrote:BTW, after many years running a household, I find that the easiest way not to run out of things is to replace them when you start the last one, not wait till it's nearly finished.
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Re: Ideas
They have this with Rizlas. It's a good idea for tissues too.Jon Corby wrote:I've just written to Kleenex.
Current tissue box technology has made getting tissues easier than ever before - the next tissue pops out a little flap in the top when you take one. You no longer have to reach into the box, or pick it up or anything to get at the tissues. Which is great. Unfortunately, it also means there is pretty much no difference between taking the first tissue from the box and the last - and I constantly find that I'm surprised and irritated to find my tissue box is empty, and now I've got to sit at my desk for hours with snot streaming down my face before I can go out and get a new one.
So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
Please tell me about ideas you have or have had, and if, like me, you've been mentally unstable/bored enough to actually write to a manufacturer.
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Re: Ideas
I've always found that, when trying to get golden syrup onto porridge, you end up with a tiny dribble of syrup between syrup jar and porridge bowl. (If you use a spoon, I mean. You can sit there waiting for it to stop dribbling but that takes FOREVER, and even then there will always be this tiny thin dribble.) Obviously you could use one of those squeezy bottles, but I don't think that really resolves the issue - you still end up with a little dribble at the end.
So what they should clearly make is golden syrup balls like the things you get for clothes washing, where you have a dissolvable container for an amount of syrup that you can just pop in the porridge. I wrote to some syrup manufacturer (can't remember who now) suggesting this, and they said they thought it was a great idea. Years later and they still haven't implemented it. Lying bastards.
So what they should clearly make is golden syrup balls like the things you get for clothes washing, where you have a dissolvable container for an amount of syrup that you can just pop in the porridge. I wrote to some syrup manufacturer (can't remember who now) suggesting this, and they said they thought it was a great idea. Years later and they still haven't implemented it. Lying bastards.
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Re: Ideas
That is a great idea Jon. My idea is, tissue companies should sell advertising space on their tissues.Jon Corby wrote:So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
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Re: Ideas
Does it bleed Julie? Do you get it anywhere else?Julie T wrote:I get excema inside my ear [...] eventually it gets so itchy I have to scratch, so it gets infected
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Re: Ideas
I think that there used to be a toilet roll manufacturer who sold advertising to a company called Now Please Wash Your Hands.Mark James wrote:My idea is, tissue companies should sell advertising space on their tissues.
God, I can still remember that feel of that stuff from primary school 40 odd years ago. Less toilet paper than shit relocation paper.
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Re: Ideas
That's a very good idea. Until it's implemented, can I suggest that you get a piece of thin cloth about six inches square. Folded into four it will fit easily in your trouser pocket, so will always be close at hand. In an emergency it can be used several times as a tissue substitute. After use it can be washed and re-used many times.Jon Corby wrote:Current tissue box technology has made getting tissues easier than ever before - the next tissue pops out a little flap in the top when you take one. You no longer have to reach into the box, or pick it up or anything to get at the tissues. Which is great. Unfortunately, it also means there is pretty much no difference between taking the first tissue from the box and the last - and I constantly find that I'm surprised and irritated to find my tissue box is empty, and now I've got to sit at my desk for hours with snot streaming down my face before I can go out and get a new one.
So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
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Re: Ideas
Eugh. I haven't been this disgusted sinceDavid Williams wrote:That's a very good idea. Until it's implemented, can I suggest that you get a piece of thin cloth about six inches square. Folded into four it will fit easily in your trouser pocket, so will always be close at hand. In an emergency it can be used several times as a tissue substitute. After use it can be washed and re-used many times.Jon Corby wrote:Current tissue box technology has made getting tissues easier than ever before - the next tissue pops out a little flap in the top when you take one. You no longer have to reach into the box, or pick it up or anything to get at the tissues. Which is great. Unfortunately, it also means there is pretty much no difference between taking the first tissue from the box and the last - and I constantly find that I'm surprised and irritated to find my tissue box is empty, and now I've got to sit at my desk for hours with snot streaming down my face before I can go out and get a new one.
So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
Seriously though, handkerchiefs are nice for decoration but carrying a snotty rag around in your trouser pocket? No thanks.Julie T wrote:I get excema inside my ear etc.
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Re: Ideas
There's another childhood memory - Mum boiling up handkerchiefs in the 'handkerchief boiling pan'. Even worse than chutney being cooked.Jon O'Neill wrote:Seriously though, handkerchiefs are nice for decoration but carrying a snotty rag around in your trouser pocket? No thanks.
Re: Ideas
Sorry Jono! Anyhoo, disgusted isn't as bad as having the condition!Jon O'Neill wrote: Eugh. I haven't been this disgusted sinceJulie T wrote:I get excema inside my ear etc.
I suggest you don't read on.
No, Matt, it doesn't bleed, but the infection makes the ears smelly and sore.Matt Morrison wrote:Does it bleed Julie? Do you get it anywhere else?Julie T wrote:I get excema inside my ear [...] eventually it gets so itchy I have to scratch, so it gets infected
I very rarely get other exczema type rashes, but it is in the family. One of my sisters had full blown adult exczema, my middle child was covered in infantile exzema when a small baby, and most of my others had at least patches behind their knees, on the inside of their elbows, and behind their ears. Washing only using E45 stuff, and applying Hydrocortizone cream usually helped, but didn't get rid of it. They eventually grew out of it.
Last edited by Julie T on Tue Nov 22, 2011 9:21 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Ideas
What about anagrams on toilet paper? See if you can get it before you have to flush. Conundrex.
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Re: Ideas
Julie T wrote:excema
Julie T wrote:exczema
Keep trying, I'm sure you'll hit on the right combination of letters eventually, if only by accident.Julie T wrote:exzema
Re: Ideas
aerosol!Phil Reynolds wrote:Julie T wrote:excemaJulie T wrote:exczemaKeep trying, I'm sure you'll hit on the right combination of letters eventually, if only by accident.Julie T wrote:exzema
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Re: Ideas
I've had one of those as a gag gift for Christmas one year. The anagrams were shit.Andy Wilson wrote:What about anagrams on toilet paper? See if you can get it before you have to flush. Conundrex.
Yer right.Jon Corby wrote:snot
Lowering the averages since 2009
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Re: Ideas
I'm sure most companies would love to be associated with snot and shit...
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Re: Ideas
Yeah, but rizla packets are so small and thin that it's easy to think you have plenty left when in fact you're running low. Then you go to make one of these and next thing you know you've woken up in just your underpants and the shop is closed. Tissue boxes on the other hand are pretty bulky things. It's easy enough to tell when you're running low.Jon O'Neill wrote:They have this with Rizlas. It's a good idea for tissues too.Jon Corby wrote: So anyway, my idea is that you should have some warning when the box is running low. Tissues with some symbol or message on them, change in colour, anything.
Please tell me about ideas you have or have had, and if, like me, you've been mentally unstable/bored enough to actually write to a manufacturer.
Re: Ideas
Well no, that's the whole point, it isn't anymore. Each tissue is presented neatly out of the top for you. Unless you pick the box up regularly to check the weight (which I don't), there is no way to tell. Maybe you buy Happy Shopper tissues that don't have this feature, I dunno.Andy Wilson wrote:Tissue boxes on the other hand are pretty bulky things. It's easy enough to tell when you're running low.
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Re: Ideas
I'm with Andy on this one. I agree with you Jon you can't get a precise hold on the number of tissues, but you do know when it's running low. In my experience, that's because the tightness of the tissue packing, which is required to make sure the next tissue rises as you pull the current one out, is strong enough so that when the box does become light, picking out a tissue often causes the box to come away from the desk with it, and you have to change your tissue picking technique to a faster smoother motion in order to rip the fucker out of there before the now-light box has a chance to take hold.Jon Corby wrote:Well no, that's the whole point, it isn't anymore. Each tissue is presented neatly out of the top for you. Unless you pick the box up regularly to check the weight (which I don't), there is no way to tell. Maybe you buy Happy Shopper tissues that don't have this feature, I dunno.Andy Wilson wrote:Tissue boxes on the other hand are pretty bulky things. It's easy enough to tell when you're running low.
But yes, in principle I agree it would be easier if you had an LCD screen counting remaining tissues on the side.
Re: Ideas
Then either you're both a couple of spastics who can't take tissues from boxes, or you're buying an inferior product. I wouldn't like to say which is more likely.Matt Morrison wrote:I'm with Andy on this one.
The whole point of the design is that you don't need to pick the box up or struggle to get a tissue out, and to that end it works very well. You reach over, you pull the tissue, it comes out easily and readies the next one. The box doesn't lift up and every tissue comes out as easily as the last.
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Re: Ideas
Yeah well I didn't know you fucking blu-tack your tissue box to your desk. It wouldn't surprise me if you have some complicated system of pulleys and rigs to make sure the tissue comes out properly too.
Re: Ideas
I don't, I obviously just have an incredible gift.Matt Morrison wrote:Yeah well I didn't know you fucking blu-tack your tissue box to your desk. It wouldn't surprise me if you have some complicated system of pulleys and rigs to make sure the tissue comes out properly too.
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Re: Ideas
Remind me not to exchange christmas presents with you. I'll buy my own fucking tissues.Jon Corby wrote:I don't, I obviously just have an incredible gift.Matt Morrison wrote:Yeah well I didn't know you fucking blu-tack your tissue box to your desk. It wouldn't surprise me if you have some complicated system of pulleys and rigs to make sure the tissue comes out properly too.
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Re: Ideas
I can't believe you don't keep count.
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Re: Ideas
HeroEase (©) - Heroin in tablet form for club goers.
Haven't quite decided who I should write to about this, though. Fisher Price didn't seem too interested.
Haven't quite decided who I should write to about this, though. Fisher Price didn't seem too interested.
Eoin Monaghan wrote:
He may not be liked on here, but you have to give some credit to Mark