Comment on Forbidden Tech
bluesheep@lemm.ee 1 month agoI’ve heard the Christmas lights one before too, but I never got it. How do (American) Christmas lights work that you’d need one of these cords?
Comment on Forbidden Tech
bluesheep@lemm.ee 1 month agoI’ve heard the Christmas lights one before too, but I never got it. How do (American) Christmas lights work that you’d need one of these cords?
ShawiniganHandshake@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
In North America, Christmas lights usually have a plug end and a socket end so you can connect multiple strings together in series.
If you accidentally put the plug end at the top of the tree, it might be tempting to try to buy or make one of these cords so you don’t have to take the lights down and redo them.
It is as dumb and lazy as it sounds.
bluesheep@lemm.ee 1 month ago
So if I understand it correctly, if you were to use this “solution”, you’d leave live exposed prongs on one end of the lights, right?
Cause that would make it even dumber than I had imagined lmao
wjrii@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Yup. American Christmas lights basically ARE very thin extension cords with the bulbs (hopefully) wired in parallel. Back in the day they were pretty much all incandescent and in series, and a single burned out bulb meant everything went out and Junior got a joyous new holiday chore!
ShawiniganHandshake@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
Yep. Exactly right.