A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy 🔍
If your post meets the following criteria, it’s welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
Icon by @Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de
- 0 users online
- 254 users / day
- 965 users / week
- 2.45K users / month
- 5.6K users / 6 months
- 1 subscriber
- 3.07K Posts
- 119K Comments
- Modlog
Cakes, fork and knife and an appetite.
Cables, I have gotten a larg amount of velcro cable ties to consolidate. As far as where they get down to the floor, I use some sleeving to just tidy it all up.
Cable management is a skill that very few master.
I would suggest you google “cable management products” and see if you get any ideas. You can buy a few trinkets that can help you, such as ties, cases to roll spare lengths of cable (shortening them), grill shelves you can attach to furniture to rest adaptors and stuff, and also things that help to keep your cables from tangling similar to those toe nail separators.
But there is no magical solution, getting any of these may help but you still need to do the thinking and the heavy lifting. Good luck!
My TV is fixed to the wall.
I use a plastic wire channel that comes with an adhesive backing, which I painted the same color as the wall to pass all my cables behind the TV. It goes up to the bottom of the TV and behind the TV cabinet.
I bought a cable management box for my power bar, so that I can put the unsightly extra length of power cables and wall warts out of sight, I try to regroup all these cables together to make one single path of cable, all tied together with velcro.
For the I/O (HDMI, etc), I plug them all, put them in the wire channel and pull the extra length so that I can coil them behind the TV and attach them to the TV rack so nothing hangs out.
Velcro ties are your friend here.
I got some extra advice OP. Power cables create electromagnetic resistance called flux. This interferes with poorly insulated data cables.
Also, don’t coil power cables. When a power cable is coiled the strength and range of flux multiplies. If you run a data cable through the center of a coil any previously effective insulation will be rendered moot.
TL;DR Power cables and data cables aren’t friends, keep them away from each other.
Easy: just cover the cables, out of sight out of mind.
Medium: define cable run pathways, pull all cables into the path, keep the cables straight, any excess cable you coil at one end and secure so it doesn’t flop around.
Hard: Make/order custom length cables so there is no excess.
Try velcro zip ties. They are reuseable. For example: https://www.amazon.com/velcro-zip-ties/s?k=velcro+zip+ties
First thing, pull out any unneeded cables. The old red/white/yellow set from your VCR that you don’t use any more? Yank it out.
Ok so what I do is I grab all the cords as tightly as I can against my body, then roll duct tape around it. Make a couple passes to really squeeze down the size. Also get a bright color tape so you can see the cords later. I use neon orange
Instructions unclear, I’ve now got cables duct taped around my body.
Smart routing of cables, cable ties or 1 power cord and use WiFi for everything.
I’m using 1 HDMI for my soundbar and a power cord thats it. Everything else is just done through streaming on the TV, I have a HDHomerun tuner in the loft for terrestrial TV.
As for cakes, grandchildren seem the best way for those to disappear.
Not as easy I have wifi router hiden behind tv and also switch. Also next to tv I also have 2 echo studio, PS5 Xbox X and also Steam deck. I usually like Ethernet over wifi not trusting that much wifi 6 as most devices not using it and also my router its own subnet.
There are some simple plastic cable channels that get the job done. Make 6 messy individual cables look like one nice fat cable. Much easier on the eyes.
Can be helpful, can also be harmful. Power cables can create interference with data cables (Ethernet, HDMI), don’t run them close to each other.
Poorly.
Take any excess, fold it up up, and bind the folds together with twist ties.
i have a velcro roll type of thing and is very useful to tie together cables.
i got it on aliexpress from ugreen for ~3$.
for the actual management, you start grouping cables based on direction / use. and keep grouping into bigger groups untill everything is tight in its place.