Personally, I buy protein powder even though I know the ingredients are actually too cheap to justify the price. But I’m too lazy, and the reward of a cold chocolate shake after working out makes me forget about the outrageous cost. It’s a little guilty pleasure I’ve come to terms with.

  • DrYes@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    What protein source is cheaper than protein powder? i pay 16€/kg for whey protein

    • UndergroundGoblin@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      23 hours ago

      I pay 42€ for 1kg. I don’t know what makes it so expencive or why your’s so cheap. Maybe because mine is vegan. I don’t know.

      But Soy is quite cheap. 100g of Soy granular costs about 1,90€ and has 52g of proteins.

  • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    health insurance, is the most obvious i recently have to buy it with some subsidies. and alot of plans dont cover most things until you paid OOP and deductibles, pretty much a scam. unless you have a good job with employee insurance its really almost barebones.

  • LeapSecond@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Heating.

    In all seriousness, imported snacks: hot sauces from Mexico, beers from central Europe and fruit from South America.

  • Kennystillalive@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    I don’t know anyone that does their own protein powder and it ain’t even that expensive if you make the calc for each serving. Going for the trouble to search up all the ingridients one by one and mixing them is way too tidious and a useless time sink.

    As for your question: It’s probably a flagship phone once in a while. Why do I think it’s overpriced? Because I use like at most 10% of what the phone has to offer and pay for the 90%. Why do I do it anyways? Because I buy a phone once all 5-6 years or so. So having the newest tech of 5 years ago isn’t that bad. Lower end phones don’t hold that long.

    • jenesaisquoi@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      I don’t know anyone that does their own protein powder

      I’m probably old and out of touch, but this used to be called “cooking”

      • Kennystillalive@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        It’s not really cooking tho more like mixing stuff. To make your own protein powder, you need to mix almond flour, flaxseed flour and other high protein flours (pea or coconut etc). Sounds super easy, but than you are still lower in protein (but have higher fiber) than mosts protein powders. To come close to the stuff you can buy, you have to add some other type of protein concentrate (whey / soy protein etc) and if you add costs of all items you get around the same price as the protein powder (almond flour alone is super expensive)… so you have to ask yourself these question: is it really that much more healthy than the protein powder you can get? Is it worth the time I spend perfecting the ratio? Is it really cheaper than getting an average protein powder?

          • Kennystillalive@feddit.org
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            2 days ago

            Because the powder is in most cases a supplement to the food and not the food itself. Having a protein drink after workout does not exclude eating a well rounded (to your needs) meal. It is complementary to it. Yeah you could chug 10 egs or so after the workout, but that isn’t that fun.

    • oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      My last phone I got immediately after the preceding years model. I wanted the experience of staying up to date just once in my life.

      But before that? I’ve only had 9 phones total, and the first 3 weren’t even smartphones. So in 23-24 years I’ve had 9.

      So I average a little less than your 5 years, but I did hit 5 once between Pixel 2 and 7.

      I immediately jumped to 8, and it’s already 3 now, but other than some battery degradation it runs like new still. That’s the main reason I left the 2 finally. Charges would last like 3 hours and newer versions of apps were struggling on the pokey hardware. The cracked screen didn’t even matter too much to me, but when both cameras died it was finally time. I still have it, occasionally pop out out to be a lil cat TV.

    • wabasso@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      In your defense, even the 10% becomes obsolete pretty fast with most apps failing to support “old” mobile OSs after a few years.

  • Libb@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    I purchased 2 sticks of ram yesterday. Even used, like the ones I purchased, it’s overpriced.

    • anon6789@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      No shade at the other answers, but I feel this is the only answer to the actual question concerning “overpriced” items. Even OP’s example, they are getting something for their extra expense: convenience. The others are things that people are buying even though there are less expensive alternatives available, but I don’t think anyone would say they aren’t at least getting a perceived value for the extra cost.

      On the other hand, we have historic RAM prices to get an idea of true value, and it is only speculation that is driving up the cost. The RAM hasn’t gotten any better, it’s not even new, it cost you more than it should, but you need it, so you have to suck it up and pay a premium while getting nothing extra in return.

  • Bluegrass_Addict@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Internet. I prefer the underdog, not giant corpo owned ISP… and by paying more, it’s only be ause those bs ‘sales’ the major ISPs put on to their plans that make you fight every 2 years or change provider to the other big corpo.

    anytime I ask what the REAL price is, it’s shocking higher then what I’m paying…those promos can be cancelled at anytime, without prior notice becAuse terms and conditions those major ISPs use.

    I refuse to play that game and would rather have constantly priced invoices from my ISP so I ‘pay more’… plus, the rare time that I call from issues, I talk to someone who actually understands networking and doesn’t have a script. my calls last maybe 20, vs the big corpo where it takes me 20-40 minutes to even get a human

    • cdzero@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      I can get behind this. I use a smaller (though they’ve grown a bit since I got on board) ISP who makes a big deal about having on-shore customer support. I’m happy to pay a small premium for that.

  • KombatWombat@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’m vegan but really missed ice cream so I started getting Ben and Jerry’s almond milk version when it’s on sale. It irks me that they charge for a pint what I could get a gallon of the dairy ice cream for, but there isn’t much selection for dairy-free. For whatever reason vegan versions of foods are pretty much always priced like premium brands. I’d be happy to buy generic brands of stuff in bulk, but instead I look at the price of something and often decide I don’t need it after all.

    • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Cheap ice cream is pumped up with air. That gallon of store brand crap probably weighs less than half a gallon of Ben & Jerry’s.

      So convenient that ice cream is sold by volume and not weight.

    • glimse@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      If it’s any consolation, the same is true for non-vegan Ben and Jerry’s, too. But quality is wayyy more important than quantity with ice cream.

      If you (ok, not *you personally" as a vegan) want high quality ice cream that doesn’t require a mortgage, your best bet is a local creamery. Wisconsin, unsurprisingly, has a ton of great ice cream shops