• @pingveno
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    42 years ago

    They aren’t on Tesco’s website anymore (this is 5 years old), so maybe no one wanted to pay a good chunk of money for a little battery life only to throw it away.

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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      42 years ago

      Nope, they’re still around: https://yewtu.be/watch?v=N65DpT2nqEI (video from 1 month ago)

      Seems from the video they’re real popular in the UK, too. And surprise surprise they’re getting thrown on the ground, probably the most dangerous litter you’ll find.

      • @pingveno
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        42 years ago

        Yikes! I guess at 3 pounds (US$4) people are willing to grab and charge sometimes.

        • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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          edit-2
          2 years ago

          Convenience above all else, the cornerstone of capitalism.

          • @pingveno
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            62 years ago

            There’s something more, though. Disposables consumerism is a creature of the past few decades. Take something similar: soft drink bottles. They used to be glass that was rinsed and reused. Now they are either single use or inefficiently recycled. From what I can tell, the main driver is that producers don’t pay for waste management.

            • @pingveno
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              12 years ago

              An addendum to my doom and gloom: there is a company, Loop, that is working on container reuse. So far they’re pretty small and have a limited catalogue of containers, but they have interests from some big players in the markets they’re active in. Tesco is on the list, so maybe they can even add this product.