Seems pointless and inconvenient for me as they usually seem to be poor quality, and can you really listen to music in the shower, and are you showering long enough to benefit from it?

Or do you own one and use for a different purpose, like swimming or Kayaking?

  • @echo64@lemmy.world
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    1411 year ago

    How is enjoying music “pointless”? I don’t understand your train of thought at all. Benefit from it? I just like music

        • monsterpiece42
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          131 year ago

          I know grammar is hard, but OP is clearly saying that using a Bluetooth speaker in the bathroom seems pointless, not music listening in general.

          Maybe at least be correct if you’re going to be a dick.

          • @MiltownClowns@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            can you really listen to music in the shower

            He’s saying Bluetooth speakers seem pointless because the music seems pointless.

            Maybe at least be correct if you’re going to be a dick.

            • monsterpiece42
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              41 year ago

              Music listening in general ≠ listening to music in the shower.

              Maybe at least be correct if you’re going to be a dick.

  • e_mc2
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    721 year ago

    My wife and daughter do yeah. Blaring kpop at 7 in the morning. FML

  • @vivadanang@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Haha I used to. True story, my wife got me one in 2015 for my bathroom - built into the exhaust fan - I listen to the news while I shower in the morning.

    Six months later, over at the neighbor’s house across the street for a block party, and someone asks “Hey, anyone know who’s blasting NPR at 4am every day?”

    Turns out the exhaust fan taking the shower moisture out basically turned into a speaker cone and for months everyone on the street was waking up pissed off lol. Replaced with a regular fan and separate speaker, no more complaints.

      • @vivadanang@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Yeah I totally came clean, partially because I couldn’t really believe it - the bathroom I use is in the basement - but the vent goes out the same spot as the laundry exhaust and damn… I went and turned it on and it was clear over the block party :| everyone laughed :).

        Also live in a place where most sleep with the windows open - I don’t think it was ever in much doubt heh. I’ve got pretty cool neighbors.

  • macabrett[they/them]
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    311 year ago

    Pointless? Yeah, it’s a luxury.

    Inconvenient? I’m not sure I understand that part. You just queue something up as you’re getting ready to shower.

    Showering long enough to benefit from it? I mean, yeah? For the 10 or so minutes I’m in the shower, I hear some music and that’s nice.

    I think you might be getting some really bad bluetooth speakers if they sound so bad and are so hard to operate that you find the process frustrating.

  • @CharadeYouAreNot@lemm.ee
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    291 year ago

    I have several JBL speakers that are awesome. I listen to music and podcasts in the morning while I get ready. Bring it into the shower, carry it around the house, take it hiking. Can’t go wrong with a decent Bluetooth speaker.

    • @pg_jglr@sh.itjust.works
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      401 year ago

      Please don’t do that while hiking around others, lots of people go hiking to get away from constant sounds like that.

      • squiblet
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        191 year ago

        Or camping, OMG. The people who set up at a national forest and start blaring shitty music.

      • @CharadeYouAreNot@lemm.ee
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        151 year ago

        I keep the volume to a reasonable personal level and pause any time people are within range. Try my best to be considerate.

        • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Just use headphones. Sound caries further than you think.

          No one but you wants to hear your music in nature.

          • @CharadeYouAreNot@lemm.ee
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            71 year ago

            Hiking out in the backcountry of the Rocky Mountains having headphones in would be extremely unsafe. A city or busy trail absolutely, headphones all the way. Bear and predator country, 50 miles from any major form of civilization, I still want to be aware of my surroundings. I’m hiking on trails where I see maybe 10 groups of people over 3 days, and half of them are at the alpine lake or water source, not even on the trail.

            • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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              91 year ago

              Then you shouldn’t be listening to music if you can’t play it without others hearing. Full stop.

              You’re just trying to justify your selfish behavior.

              If you have to listen to music and hear your surroundings, get a pair of open ear headphones.

              • @CharadeYouAreNot@lemm.ee
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                11 year ago

                Y’all act like volume adjustment isn’t a thing. Just traipsing through the forest at 100 volume. It’s totally possible to adjust the volume to a level that allows one some background ambiance while able to hear the world around you. I will agree, open ear headphone would be nice on some trails.
                Any suggest on good open ear headphones?

          • Buck Fucket
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            51 year ago

            Not completely safe being out hiking and blocking off your ability to hear your surroundings. I think it’s completely acceptable to be considerate while out with a Bluetooth speaker.

            • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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              51 year ago

              You’re wrong. Get some open ear headphones if you’re concerned with hearing what’s going on around you.

              Playing music through speakers on the trail is never considerate.

              • Buck Fucket
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                31 year ago

                I’m not wrong. I’m stating my opinion. If I am wrong in stating my opinion than you are wrong as well for stating your opinion. I have a pair of open headphones, Audio Technica R70X. They still allow music to escape just as bad as it would be for a Bluetooth speaker to be playing at low volume. Perhaps Samsung Buds Pro 2 could work, but why would you want to seal yourself away from nature that much if you’re out hiking? Bluetooth speaker has been an appropriate choice in my experience.

                • @EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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                  11 year ago

                  If you’re in nature to enjoy nature, leave your music at home. No one wants to hear it but you.

                  And open ear headphones are different from open headphones. Open ear headphones are basically ear buds that don’t go into your ear canal, but direct music into it.

  • Shambling Shapes
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    1 year ago

    Body wash and long hair shampoo plus conditioner takes me 10 minutes, full shaving routine takes me another 10. Yes, I listen to music through a bluetooth speaker. Yes, the quality is what one would expect from an inexpensive speaker the size of a soda can.

    No, I don’t blare music when people are sleeping.

    I benefit from it as much as I do from listening to music at any other time? It’s entertainment.

  • andrew
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    141 year ago

    I’ve used one for podcasts, definitely. But even for music, they may be poor quality generally but they’re significantly better than a phone speaker, and much better than a phone speaker ten feet away through glass or plastic.

  • @WhyAUsername_1@lemmy.world
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    141 year ago

    I actually use my phone. The speakers on this bad boy are loud enough to hear it while taking a shower.

    I like to dance a little, singing into my shampoo bottle as if I am performing a concert.

    That’s just my way of pumping myself up… to go through the shitty day at the office.

    Happy Monday everyone!

  • @Zibobwa@lemmy.world
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    111 year ago

    Yeah! Check out UE megaboom products…waterproof, sound amazing, and batteries last foe hours. 2 thumbs up!

  • @jet@hackertalks.com
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    111 year ago

    If you like long showers, and you listen to a news program, or an audiobook. It makes a lot of sense.

  • anon6789
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    101 year ago

    Ironically my girlfriend used to use one and now doesn’t, but I’ve started to use one.

    I found a cheap no name Amazon speaker on the ground in the snow and it still worked. Stuck it in the bathroom since it was obviously waterproof. Now that I’ve grown my hair longer and have to commute again, I’m in the bathroom longer and use the time to finish up the bits of podcast I don’t get to finish on my commute.

    Like others have said, sound quality isn’t the best, but gets the job done. With all the other noises in the bathroom, pristine sound isn’t gonna happen from any source, let alone cranked built in phone speakers.

    • @adhocfungus@midwest.social
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      61 year ago

      A lot of people don’t understand how much time long hair actually adds. When mine was reaching my hips it would add 10 minutes to my shower. I wasn’t even doing conditioner or anything; it just takes forever to get all of your hair lathered up and then rinsed out. Now that my hair is short again I’m in and out in less than five minutes, but I wouldn’t have minded music back then.

      • anon6789
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        21 year ago

        It definitely came as a shock to me. I’ve had really short hair for the last 20 years and decided to grow it out last year for funsies. It’s at my shoulders now and I didn’t notice the time creeping up as it grew, but I can see it on the clock now!

  • southsamurai
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    101 year ago

    Eh, pointless is kind of a matter of preference. It’s something you either want, or you don’t. There’s no point beyond that.

    The inconvenience is no greater than it used to be for other types of portable music sources. Folks have been using radios and “boom boxes” in the bathroom for longer than I’ve been alive. My mom had a small radio she was allowed to use in the bathroom when she was a kid in the 50s.

    It’s also more convenient than playing the music extra loud from another room.

    But, yeah, if you’re just hopping in and doing the bare minimum as fast as possible, it would be an increase in effort beyond the reward of music for most people. You’d have to be the sort that just always has music playing for it to be “worth it” to switch to a dedicated shower speaker.

    Mine is a fairly general purpose unit that is shower proof. I bought it specifically for use in the shower (though it’s rarely in the shower, I prefer to place it elsewhere most of the time), but it isn’t advertised as a shower speaker. Most of those that are tend to be kinda meh sound wise, and/or lack any bass at all. I also use it in the kitchen while cooking, unless I’m the only one home and can really crank my main system up.

    But, yeah, lots of people have dedicated units of some kind.

  • Tippon
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    91 year ago

    I use a cheap little speaker pretty much every time I shower, but I tend to listen to music whenever I’m getting ready anyway. Because it’s a cheap one, the sound isn’t amazing, but when I’m in the shower the other noises drown a lot of the sound out anyway, so it doesn’t really matter.

    I’m disabled though, so I tend to get in the shower after my wife and kid have left the house, and I take a while. If I shower in the morning, my washing and dressing routine can take close to an hour, so it’s not like I’m jumping in and out before the first song has the chance to finish.

    I hadn’t thought of listening to a podcast or audiobook while I’m getting ready though, so that might be worth a try :)