• WIZARD POPE💫@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    So okay the bottle ones like this are fine

    It is these fuckers I have an issue with

    I swear if I ever see the person who designed the new milk cap I will make them choke on a fucking tetrapak.

  • ladicius@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    I like this new feature very much - the lid no longer has to be held in the other hand or such but simply stays where it is needed.

    People who are not able to perform most simple tasks like turning the lid a little sideways should be exempted from elections.

    • frosch@sh.itjust.works
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      11 days ago

      Yeah, turning it a bit to the side is no big deal.

      However, I recently found out that this makes drinking things a little more viscous absolutely impossible without messing up your shit.

      I drank a Kefir, which you normally shake before drinking. So there is a lot of it clinging to the inside of the cap for dear life - up until to that very moment you take a sip. Then, it decides that it had enough and spills on your clothes, face, shoes - whatever the fuck it can possibly get to.

      So either you need a glass, let it sit until the cap is mostly empty or lick that cap and look like a complete degenerate.

      • volvoxvsmarla @lemm.ee
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        11 days ago

        I will be going to the store later to buy kefir and relive your experience so I can better judge its validity

          • volvoxvsmarla @lemm.ee
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            5 days ago

            So, it took me embarrassingly many shopping trips to remember to buy kefir. But I finally did. For reference, I chose Andechser Bio Kefir. But to be honest I didn’t find the lid dripping. I shook before I opened and it was still fine. Repeated that a couple of times. Decided to leave some for the next day, maybe the consistency would change after opening. Still fine. Then I decided to let it warm to room temperature and still no dripping.

            So unfortunately I cannot reproduce the scientific findings of @frosch.

          • OrgunDonor@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            It’s been 8 hours. Either they ded. Or are too ashamed and embarrassed after getting covered in their drink.

    • kwomp2@sh.itjust.works
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      11 days ago

      Hold up. You can’t hold the lid in the same hand you hold the bottle with and still feel eligible to vote?

  • horse@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 days ago

    Having been on holiday at a place with a beach recently and seeing how much plastic crap gets washed ashore and how much of that crap is bottle lids, I’m actually pretty okay with this change.

  • LANIK2000@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Personally I’ve enjoyed the change, keeping track of the lid was always annoying. Also find it strange that everyone I’ve ever seen complain about it, never just riped it off, it’s not that hard, I tried just for the sake of it, it’s not any harder than opening the damn bottle. In fact, once saw one of these naggers complain about accidentally tearing it half way off, making it even more annoying apparently. What clowns.

      • LANIK2000@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        No, but I have friends and family and we occasionally share a bottle, extra annoyance point for sharing in a group of classmates or similar almost stranger group. Usually the first person to open it holds on to it, or you pass it with the bottle, but sometimes someone puts it down, for any reason really, lazyness, not expecting to close it soon, and before ya know it, ya searching for the fucking lid.

        • redisdead@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          That is the wildest, stretchiest of hair splittings I’ve ever seen used to justify inconveniencing people with in the name of ‘ecology’.

  • neidu2@feddit.nl
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    11 days ago

    If you are able to open the cap to begin with, you’re capable of twisting it and tearing it off. It’s not that hard. I never understood the “controversy” when these were introduced, and I’m convinced that the ones too inept to take it off completely are the same ones who caused the caps to end up in the wrong place to begin with.

    • Noodle07@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Uuuuuh never taken the cap off, but I also stopped losing the cap after putting it down 5 seconds ago to pour myself a glass of soda 🤷

      • Sneezycat@sopuli.xyz
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        11 days ago

        Come on grandma, we’ve told you you can’t take your memory meds with soda, it’s bad for you. Here, have this glass of water…

  • NotJustForMe@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    Another moron-filter. People complain about simple gestures that could potentially help humanity in a small way. We’ve always had morons. We seem to reach a critical mass, though. The real issue if overpopulation: more morons in general.

    It’s fine that those people exist, but they shouldn’t be allowed to reproduce or teach.

    Those caps are fine. Drinking from plastic bottles is stupid enough. Having them at all was a huge step back.

    What a world.

  • YourPrivatHater@ani.social
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    11 days ago

    Rip that shit right off! Isn’t it necessary to separately dispose the cap and bottle anyway because they are different plastics?

    • DacoTaco@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      No, you dont. Its both plastic so both go in plastics :')
      Which is why a new law was passed to make the top not easily removable so both are disposed together and (depending on the design) reused

      • LordKitsuna@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Just a reminder that recycling is a lie, and that pretty much anywhere in the world 90% of plastic just ends up in the landfill regardless of whether or not you properly sorted into recycling. The cost of sorting, processing, and then reusing the plastic is more expensive than simply using new plastic so it’s not profitable. And the vast majority of cardboard is on usable due to the different types of dyes used to put logos colors Etc on it or is otherwise contaminated on its way to the recycling facility

        Pretty much the only materials actually for real reused and recycled is glass and metals like aluminum and steel

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          10 days ago

          Germany has a recycling rate for PET bottles of 94.8%, 45% for general plastic packaging. It’s profitable because if you sell stuff in plastic packaging you’re forced to pay for the recycling. As a consumer you don’t pay for having those yellow bags and bins collected, which means that if you separate all the packaging and put it in there you get to pay less for your other bin. As a producer, if you’re switching your packaging to something that’s easier to recycle, you pay less into the scheme and either lower prices to sell more product or pocket the difference. Our Greens love to solve shit by strategically shifting around market incentives: When the producer has to pay the bill the market failure suddenly vanishes.

          Glass OTOH is a problem because even small contaminations can mess up a whole batch, and the process is energy-intensive in the first place. Crushed glass makes very good aggregate for concrete, though.

          As to cardboard: Sort what you can, the rest goes into industrial composting. Left-over plastic gets burned, which actually isn’t that bad – the issue isn’t the burning (they’ve got proper filters and everything) but that the plastic isn’t sourced from renewable sources. Certainly more sensible even in its current state than burning oil while putting the plastic in a landfill.