Readers offer their best tips for finding your screwdrivers in a mess, looking at apartments, and working from the same room you sleep in.
Every day we receive boatloads of great reader tips in our inbox, but for various reasons?maybe they're a bit too niche, maybe we couldn't find a good way to present it, or maybe we just couldn't fit it in?the tip didn't make the front page. From the Tips Box is where we round up some of our favorites for your buffet-style consumption. Got a tip of your own to share? Add it in the comments, email it to tips at lifehacker.com, or share it on our tips and expert pages.
Label Your Screwdrivers' Handle for Easier Organization
Connie gets fed up with her mess of screwdrivers:
Concerning screwdrivers: Phillips or standard? Pull all of your screwdrivers out of your tool box or bucket. I have about 20 in total. Each one is marked on the end of the handle with a white tag, and that white tag has a + or - sign on it. Taping the paper tags on each only takes a few minutes. Saves lots of time in the long run. In my tool box I keep Phillips on one side of the drawer, standard on the other side.
When someone wants a Phillips I can easily grab 5 or 6 so they can take their choice of sizes.
I'd argue it's also worth investing in a screwdriver with removable heads, so you just have one screwdriver that fits all your needs. If you already have a sizable collection, though, this is one way to get it under control a bit. Photo by Emilio_13.
Check the Shower When You're Hunting Apartments
Hammy_sammy reminds us of an oft-neglected test for new apartments:
When hunting for an apartment, remember to ask how well the shower works (fixtures, drain, how fast the hot water heats, etc). If you're super busy (like myself), dealing with a partially-functional shower can be a huge drag. When you preview the apartment, ask whoever's showing you the place if you can turn the shower head on for a couple minutes. That way you can test it for yourself. Pay attention to their response, too?if they say no without clear reason, there may be a significant problem (unless they're someone that doesn't actually know much about the place, like a realtor).
Photo by Ian Brown.
Rearrange Your Bedroom for Work-and-Home Separation
Audiopocalypse shares a tip for students and those who work from home:
A tip for fellow insomniacs: if your bedroom is also the room you do work in, rearrange the room so that your bed's headboard, rather than being oriented along a wall, separates your sleeping space in the room from your work space. I recently made this change, and it has really helped my brain dissociate where I work from where I sleep.
Photo by Taber Andrew Bain.
Spring Clean Your Office with 3 Containers
Rosemary Jayne tell us how she decluttered her office with minimal stress:
If you're trying to spring clean your office or study then grab a scanner and a shredder and put them on the desk, and put a cardboard box next to it. Cardboard box is for all the recycling, trash can is for the trash and then anything that you want to scan and/or shred can be shredded right away. I always had a problem when sorting stuff out that I would end up with a huge pile of shredding or scanning - this time it took a little longer to actually do everything in the office but I saved a lot of time by not trekking downstairs every 20 minutes to keep the shredding pile at a manageable size.
Photo by Mack Male.
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