u/Obvious_Guest7370

Image 1 — I used AI to visualize my space, but i need some worldly advice!
Image 2 — I used AI to visualize my space, but i need some worldly advice!

I used AI to visualize my space, but i need some worldly advice!

The 2nd picture is for my present desk setup. You can tell its clean but it is devoid of personality I like green plants and the cozy lived-in aesthetic, and ran a photograph of my room through an Reasonable Fill with AI generator to visualise what it may probably appear wish to (first image). However, I am so obsessed with the result. For the floralpreneurs with ornate, botanical desks: how realistic is this? Which low-maintenance plants?

u/Obvious_Guest7370 — 8 hours ago

Tracked or AWD robot mower for a sloped yard?

I’m trying to choose a robot mower for a sloped yard (up to 77%). Photo is the rough before state. I’d clean it up first, then use a robot mower for regular maintenance after that. I keep coming back to two options: the Lymow One Plus and the Navimow X4.
From what I’ve seen, both of these are already among the best-performing robot mowers on slopes, and user feedback seems very positive overall. The Lymow is extra enticing since it appears like it might tackle more difficult conditions, slippery grass and muck even more confidently. The tracks, improved grip and real blade all sound handy, especially if there are wet patches, dips or leaves/ small twigs lying about.
But I also wonder if that’s more machine than I actually require? I hardly ever mow immediately after heavy rains anyway and if the ground is reasonably dry there could be enough with just what the X4's AWD and active steering can provide. Also a huge sell for me is less turf damage when turning.
So that brings me to my primary question: for what should be a common residential yard with slopes would it really be worth investing in a tracked mower, or is one of those X4's the long-term better option?
Random question, but if a yard is actually that rugged to need a tank-style robotic mower to make it around without getting stuck, is that still good use case? Or where people normally just switch to the riding mower or some heavier-duty implement?

u/Obvious_Guest7370 — 3 days ago

My parents have been starting to slow down a little, so over the past several months I’ve tried help them replace a few household work with more automated options. One of those was a robot mower. I bought them a Navimow X430, mostly on the fact that their yard has quite a slope. The problem is that they still don't actually want to use it. They pull out the old push mower again and will keep going back to it because it is what they are used to. So I’m hoping some people here will give me real life reason or experiences that I can tell them about. What ultimately won you over when you switched from mowing manually to a robot mower?

If there are any tips to simplify day-to-day use for my parents I also would greatly appreciate it as well. They’re not very comfortable using apps, so anything that further takes this whole process to more of a set it and forget it would prove hugely useful.

u/Obvious_Guest7370 — 17 days ago

The ticket booking frenzy for the 2026 World Cup has reached an unprecedented level. Over 500 million football fans worldwide are competing for merely 7 million match tickets, creating a huge supply-demand imbalance. Tickets for top-tier clashes and key matches keep skyrocketing with severe premium pricing. Many fans complain about the difficulty of grabbing tickets and the soaring prices. The World Cup has already gone viral long before kick-off amid heated disputes over ticket chaos.
Would you be willing to pay a premium price to watch a World Cup blockbuster match live?

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u/Obvious_Guest7370 — 19 days ago

Hey folks! I’ve been using a Navimow for a few years now, and I’m thinking about upgrading next year. My current mower is an older i-series model that’s been solid, but my yard is rough. It has lots of tight turns, bumpy spots, and thick tree cover that sometimes blocks the signal.
Lately, I’ve seen Navimow hinting at their 2026 models. It sounds like they’re adding new sensors and cameras instead of just relying on GPS maybe the i2 LiDAR and X4 series.
Since my yard has so many tricky areas, I’m curious if anyone has tried the newer models with the built-in scanning sensors yet. I’d like to stick with Segway since it works so well, but I really need to know if the new all-wheel drive and the automatic mapping actually handle obstacles and tight spaces as well as they say.
Would love to hear from anyone testing the latest models or who’s already switched to the X4. Should I be looking at other brands that handle tough yards better? Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Obvious_Guest7370 — 20 days ago