My Weird Prompts

Eurobox Endgame: Can One Box Rule Every Room?

37 min · 29. juni 2026
episode Eurobox Endgame: Can One Box Rule Every Room? cover

Description

What if you could standardize every zone of your household — kitchen, bathroom, under-bed storage, bulk overflow — onto a single industrial container footprint? In this episode, we explore the Eurobox (DIN EN 13199) endgame: a world where moving becomes near-trivial because your permanent storage is your moving box. We break down how the 600x400mm footprint fits kitchen cabinets, slides under beds, seals against pests, and stacks on pallets. With real stories of a 26-box move that went from truck to fully unpacked in two hours, this is a deep dive into what happens when you treat standardization itself as the product.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the My Weird Prompts community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

300 episodes

episode Can You Buy Truly Unbreakable Dinnerware? artwork

Can You Buy Truly Unbreakable Dinnerware?

Moving sucks, especially when your plates arrive in pieces. In this episode, we answer a listener's very specific question: does genuinely shatterproof kitchenware exist, and can you build a small kit of it that survives move after move? We break down the three real contenders — Corelle's Vitrelle glass composite, melamine resin camping dinnerware, and stainless steel — and the surprising tradeoffs each one demands. You'll learn how Vitrelle's laminated three-layer construction creates compressive stress that makes it 3-4x more impact-resistant than standard tempered glass, why melamine can't go in the microwave, and whether stainless steel's indestructibility is worth eating off a surgical tray. If you're a renter who moves every year or two, this episode will save you from hearing that ceramic crunch ever again.

29. juni 202626 min
episode Your Moving Feedback Loop: Kaizen for Clutter artwork

Your Moving Feedback Loop: Kaizen for Clutter

Moving is the rare life event that forces you to handle every object you own — twice. That repetition isn't just suffering; it's a built-in feedback loop most people never close. This episode builds a packing-pass and unpacking-pass decision tree for the keep-or-discard moment, a Maybe bucket system with a 30-day review deadline, and a 20-minute post-move debrief protocol. You'll learn why the unpacking pass has better data (you've lived without the item for weeks), how to ask "would I pay to move this again?" as a stricter test, and how a simple inventory verdict column lets your own failure patterns teach you what to stop buying. Based on a listener's insight connecting moving to Kaizen's Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle, and grounded in the fresh start effect research from Dai, Milkman, and Riis.

29. juni 202625 min