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13 horribly designed everyday products that need to be reinvented

Here are the everyday products we've been using for decades that somehow have avoided any innovation.

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We shouldn't have to worry that our simplest household products will let us down.

But plenty of them do — on a daily basis.

For every perfectly crafted Dixon-Ticonderoga pencil, there's a shampoo bottle that will never get completely empty.

Here are the everyday products we've been using for decades that — somehow — have withstood innovation.

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Umbrellas have existed since the 1st century AD, but the common collapsible variety is awfully flimsy when the going gets rough. Many turn inside-out or simply fall apart during heavy rainstorms.

Even if you're meticulous about squeezing a tube of toothpaste from bottom to top, you'll still end up with a maddening bit at the end that you just can't use. The person who solves this problem should earn a Nobel Prize.

Same goes for soap and shampoo bottles, which use compressed air to dispense their contents. That mechanism fails miserably once the bottle gets too low, and you're left with wasted soap every time.

You know a product's packaging is poor when a new affliction — "wrap rage" — is invented just to describe the god-awful process of opening it. Plastic containers are nobody's friend.

The mixed-temperature faucet was first patented in 1880. But somehow in the intervening 136 years, nobody has designed a standard model that extends far enough to allow you to wash both hands without hitting the back of the sink.

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The quickest way to make someone look like a doofus is to install ambiguous handles on public doors. No matter whether you push or pull, you somehow always end up being wrong.

Automatic hand dryers seem like a good idea in theory (and some, like Dyson's Airblade, actually get the job done). But often the machines just blow air onto your hands without really drying the dampness. And good luck if the motion sensor is weak.

Plastic wrap may preserve your food, but unless you handle it perfectly, you're apt to find yourself dealing with a bunched-up nightmare. The only salvation is the two cardboard tabs on each box that keep the roll in place.

Most household toilets still use a germy handle rather than a foot pedal or automatic flush, and only to send gallons of wasted water down the drain. Meanwhile, there are billions who live without clean water around the world.

Computer printers use expensive cartridges and require huge drivers just to perform the basic function of making a digital item physical. Many are also bulky and made of non-nature-friendly plastic, despite designers having had 30 years to iterate.

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In most of the US, bathroom stall doors are purposely built to leave gaps on the side and the bottom. Everyone who's been in one knows this creates anxiety of the highest order, especially if you make eye contact with someone in the opposite mirror.

Cereal boxes still live in the dark ages with tops that can easily fail to close and plastic bags that refuses to open without a pair of scissors. Reverting back to the bag's old design of wax paper may be the quickest remedy manufacturers could make.

TV remotes come with an exceedingly large number of extra buttons. Even though many people use only the power, channel, and volume buttons, the average TV remote comes with dozens of additional choices, many poorly defined.

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