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foobar1962 | 5 months ago
So when doing the calculus for brown paper bags don't forget to include the cost goods wasted when they fail.
foobar1962 | 5 months ago
So when doing the calculus for brown paper bags don't forget to include the cost goods wasted when they fail.
potato3732842|5 months ago
tremon|5 months ago
nandomrumber|5 months ago
The white plastic bags they replaced are magnitudes of order more durable and able to carry, I should test this, at a guess ten times the weight. Basically you can fill a white plastic bag with 1.25 litre water bottles to the extent no more can physically fit in the bag and it will be safe to carry and reuse 50 times.
Fortunately the white plastic bags are still available online (eBay / Amazon / etc) so I just buy 50 for my own use as required and use them till they nearly fall apart then repurpose them as bin liners.
They’re incredibly cheap, don’t really get dirty in an unhygienic way, can be washed if something does spill in them, and they fold up in to almost no space.
throwawayffffas|5 months ago
Yeah that's not good, the way they do that is with more plastic in the bags. A single bag weighs as much as 5-10 old timey single use bags.
0xffff2|5 months ago
Incidentally, given that I'm _not_ old enough to remember a time before supermarkets had plastic bags, either the invention of attaching handles to paper bags took a very long time to migrate to my corner of California, or this comment makes no sense
mcv|5 months ago
I haven't seen those in decades unfortunately. It was a great way to reuse those boxes.
lupusreal|5 months ago