cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/[email protected]/t/431650
Hope you all find this interesting, delighted I got the chance to have a play with the machine!
I liked that he had already given it away to a patreon person before the video was posted.
While it was very extravagant, it was fun to watch. It looked like part of a satellite.
It’s wild to think that you just want to support your favourite weird coffee person and some day a 20k lever machine shows up at your door.
Exactly! I have a pour over cone and an Aeropress and just enjoy listening to him talk coffee. I wouldn’t even know where to put that thing in my house, but I’d find somewhere!
Fetishizes overpriced BS. At that price point it’s just irrelevant for the vaaaast majority of people. Do the extremely ultra wealthy even make their own coffee?
If I had that kind of money I’d buy a car, wtf.He addresses that concern. This is no machine for you or me to “just add to the countertop”. I think of it as a big proof of concept.
But there are two kinds of people who spend tons of money on small improvements:
- rich people with a hobby to fill their life but don’t want starter stuff or are grown out of it
- people neck deep in a hobby (i.e. cyclists “regularly” spend 6k on a single bike and hundreds on clothing and accessories) that can afford it.
I know there’s overlap between the groups but it’s something I can think of.
Also, I could think of high end offices that want to really splurge on the coffee kit. The advantage that the machine is instantly hot lends itself to office environments where people want coffee in different intervals.
To show how much I don’t deserve the machine, I spent the first half of the video thinking you had to hand pump the thing with the giant lever! Nobody that can afford that thing is doing that kind of manual labor! 😂
But it gives the impression of manual labor. Like the “farm village” that Marie Antoinette had to play peasant in.
At some point it’s not about the end product. It’s about the process of making the end product and what you use to get there.
At least that’s what I think the philosophy of coffee gear heads to be.