(Part 2) Best products from r/tulsa

We found 22 comments on r/tulsa discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 42 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/tulsa:

u/xpen25x · 1 pointr/tulsa

if anyone goes with any camera system. always go with at least 3 meg ip cam's. this way you can actually tell things more then a general description. if you have ever seen those crappy videos shown on tv or screen shots on the news. they are from crappy camera's. even 1080p isnt a very good picture when you zoom in.

i always suggest hikvision camera's.

you can see many youtube videos. these are not the us version but work and will save you a couple hundred a camera. you just need a POE switch and a computer you can use to store the video.

u/mariamartini · 1 pointr/tulsa

$1 for 2

Glass Vials, 1 Dram, Pack of 12 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002JV6976/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_wvGmzbKREFEWW

These may be smaller than you were looking for actually.

u/Yeugwo · 1 pointr/tulsa

A lot of our power cables do have "earth" (we call it ground 'round these parts!) pins. But not all do, it depends on what is being powered. A hair dryer will have the ground pin, a printer probably wouldn't.

I have 2 or 3 power adapters you could borrow by the way. They are relatively cheap though, I used these in my travels

u/combat_chopper · 2 pointsr/tulsa

I've been using Cox as an ISP for a little over five years, in two different locations in Tulsa. Here's my experience:

I have Premier service from Cox. I pay $65.99 a month for a 25 MB connection. Speedtest.net tests usually hit about 24/25 MB on the high end, and 12/13 MB on the low end.

At our house right now, we have 1 pc, 1 tv streaming netflix/hulu, 3 smartphones, an xbox360, and a couple of tablets. We're able to move data across all the devices at once without much of a hiccup. The TV and computer are connected with ethernet over a gig speed switch, and we're using this as a wireless router.

I've only had one outage. It was during harsh winter weather in 2010. I woke up and wasn't able to get connected, even after powercycling the modem. After two hours, the connection was restored. (I never actually called Cox during this outage because I assumed they had some equipment issues due to the weather)

u/redditcuckfetish · 8 pointsr/tulsa

online, shipped to your door

everywhere in Tulsa is an overpriced scam

http://amzn.com/B00V42X7TO