+123 There is always a minute chance that your laundry will be perfectly folded after a tumble dry. amirite?

by Anonymous 1 year ago

I still wonder why they haven't made a washer+dryer combined

by Anonymous 1 year ago

I don't think that's true. A tumbler will never produce the required motion to fold a men's dress shirt.

by Anonymous 1 year ago

I hate to be envoking Cunningham's Law here but I'm gonna side with you on this one

by Anonymous 1 year ago

If that's the case, if you put a perfectly folded men's shirt in there, would the dryer not be able to unfold it?

by Anonymous 1 year ago

Of course it would. It produces an action that will unfold a shirt but it does not follow that same action would fold. Folding and unfolding happen differently.

by Anonymous 1 year ago

Weird line of reasoning. If you grab a folded shirt and whip it around it will unfold, but you can keep shaking it forever and it'd never refold.

by Anonymous 1 year ago

Lmao you should be a lawyer bro!

by Anonymous 1 year ago

I understand the idea here that randomness will has the capability to produce order, but the application is off. Imagine that it just started raining and you are watching the raindrops hit the concrete pavement. There is a nonzero chance that raindrops spell out your first name after a given amount of time. However, toss a crumpled up shirt out into the rain and you can guarantee the precipitation will not fold the shirt. Just like I can guarantee the dryer won't fold it perfectly. It's the wrong kind of randomness for the end result.

by Anonymous 1 year ago

Scientifically speaking, you can never go from chaos to order randomly.

by Anonymous 1 year ago

Dang gnomes got in the dryer and are messing with me again.

by Anonymous 1 year ago