If you're like us, you live your life on credit and rentals. Netflix, Zipcar, Amazon TV-on-demand and so forth. It would make living in New York so much simpler and more tolerable if we were able to rent everything.

Luckily, there's a new website called Snapgoods which solves the problem of not being able to pay for blenders for your next margarita-themed party, offices for when you want to pretend you don't work at home in yesterday's boxers, and a digital camera for when you realize taking photos of your engagement party on a Motorola phone is so 2006.

Snapgoods rents New Yorkers all these items and more through its straightforward website. You can also offer your own items for rent on the site and through your Facebook and Meetup contacts, charging people varying rates and keeping them honest with PayPal security deposits.

Keep reading for Asylum's Top 5 list of awesome goods you might actually want to rent through the site.

iBot Roomba 56
If you're the kind of person who's too lazy to even push a vacuum cleaner around your minuscule apartment, but feel like schlepping to Boerum Hill for a device that will do the cleaning for you, then the Roomba is for you. This one goes for $10 a day, or free with a $10 coupon the site provides new users.

DIY Seafood Boil Kit
This kit includes the burner, boiler and basket you'll need to crank out one mother of a crawfish boil (oil-soaked seafood not included.) And at only $20 a day, this rental practically makes room in your budget to fly in a New Orleans chef for the occasion.

Nintendo Wii and Games
How does this grab you, nerds? It comes "with 2 controllers and 2 nunchucks... 2 rechargeable batteries and the dock. Also included are 5 mario brothers games... 3 Guitar Hero games... and Mad World." This $25-per-week steal is enough to make you forget all about how embarrassing Nintendo Game Cube was.

Video-recording eyeglasses
Clark Kent's got nothing on these puppies. Dorktastic recording spectacles have been advertised in the classifieds of Boy's Life and other magazines for years, but these are apparently the real deal. They're probably banned in most public restrooms, though, so don't even think about it, Larry Craig.

iPad
At $15 a day (and a $500 actual retail price), you'd pretty much be stealing this sucker from its owner. The iPad, apart from being a useless device for anyone with a laptop, cell phone, or access to the internet, is a nifty little gadget to whip out at a tech conference, wedding, or any other event you probably aren't capable of maneuvering with your personality. Seriously, folks, it includes a one-person air hockey game, so you really have no excuse not to rent this.