You've already done a good job identifying that microwaves and old TVs are not the safest devices to take apart. Devices operating with low voltages are fairly safe to tinker with. That would mean devices that come with a mains adapter that drops the voltage to 5/12/24 V(AC/DC) and are not directly connected to mains.
Nevertheless, any device might have an input capacitor that should be discharged before touching the terminals, as a safety precaution.
SMD capacitors might be tricky to make contact to both terminals. One easy way would be to take a cable like a 4 mm "banana" cable, that's usually attached to multimeters and put sharp probes to each end of the cable and use it to penetrate PCB solder mask (and possible protective coating) and short any traces that seem to be in power input or near large capacitors.
Through hole components are easier to short out. In both cases it may be difficult to know if you have made good contact or not, so solder pads are a good target in short circuiting. That way you haven't at least penetrated the PCB copper.
In all likelihood the input capacitors in a low-power device are minized due to cost reasons and are safe. Usually they also have a "bleedout" resistor, rendering them safe after disconnecting from mains for a while.