Adidas Creates Trainers Made From Plastic Ocean Debris in Bid To End Pollution (telegraph.co.uk) 83
Adidas is building on its previous commitment to turn plastic pollution into high-performance products. Next month, the German sportswear will begin selling three new editions of its popular UltraBoost shoe, all made from plastic debris found in the ocean. From a report: Helping to achieve its goal of creating one million pairs of the Ultra Boost style, Parley for the Oceans will produce trainers made from recycled ocean waste. Made up of 11 reused plastic bottles in each pair, the Ultra Boost' laces, lining and sock lining covers will be made of other recycled products, making for an environmentally-friendly high-performance product.
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Well, that brilliant idea didn't last long, now did it?
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I wonder what the environmental impact of going out and collecting the plastic is. I'd bet a shiny penny that it's worse for the environment than just leaving that tiny amount of plastic in the ocean.
It's not like there are floating barges full of perfectly sorted plastic out there, the reason nobody's cleaning it up in the first place is because it's a horrible job to do so.
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Can't wait to see that $120 price tag on ocean plastic shoes from $0.50 worth of drinking bottles. This changes everything.
Good thing I still wear Converse All-Stars.
Have you heard that Nordstroms is going to sell jeans that look like they have mud on them for $400.00? It looks like a perfect match.
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Yeah, well there is always something deeply unsavoury about the way companies try to cash in on a mostly false image of being "green", "healthy" or whatever. Recycling is only ever going to be a superficial excuse for not doing what really should be done: don't produce superfluous rubbish. Just as an illustration: when a 5p charge was introduced on plastic carrier bags in Wales a few years back, it led to a fall in the number of bags used of about 80%. The 5 pence a bag now costs isn't really a heavy burden
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Converse all-stars aren't exactly good buys for what you get....
Sneakers. Repeat after me (Score:3)
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Why? Can't American readers (who are probably a minority) read proper English?
As native[1] English speakers, lessee–– UK population: 65M
Ireland population: 4.6M
Australia population: 23.8M
New Zealand population: 4.6M
South Africa population: 54M
Canada population: 36M[2]
versus
US population: 321M
Americans the minority of native English speakers? Nope. Thanks for playing though.
[1] However fluent in English they may be, most Indians – AFAIK, and I've traveled there some – don't consider English to be their native language. I'd posit the same for most sub-
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Source: Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]
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Is Mt. Dew now Coke? Coke doesn't make sense when referring to Soda/pop as a general term.
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It may not make sense, but AC wasn't lying.
There are areas where coke is a valid synonym for pop/soda.
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I guess... just doesn't make any sense to me, I suppose, considering coke is a type of soda.
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Tennishoes - run together just like that. Not "tennis shoes".
Sneakers was a game from Sirius Software.
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Ewww... Water? (Score:2)
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Water? You mean like in the toilet?
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The Ocean is one giant toilet for fish. Think on that.
Superb marketing idea (Score:2)
What Chinese clothing companies have been doing for ages, making 'fleece' clothing out of shredded plastic bottles because they're so cheap a raw material that it even pays to ship thousands of tons of them from Europe to China before processing them, now will be part of an environmentalist image that will help get the Adidas owners even more stupidly rich. Of course, cargo ship exhaust gases won't show up in the ads...
One time (Score:1)
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Remember the old line from the environmentalist groups about "everyone doing a little bit helps"? If they get PR out
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Did you tell everyone about your bag saving and feel smug for at least a day? If so, then you did save the planet. If not, then probably not so much.
What? (Score:2)
Best part of all... (Score:2)
When you've worn them out, you can toss them right back into the ocean!
Because it's not pollution when you're returning it back to its source, right?
Just don't throw them away in a landfill.
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I would like to see the life cycle calculations. (Score:2)
Do they come with (Score:2)
barnacles pre-installed?
Always thought (Score:3)
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I always thought generalities about companies who constantly change the design of their products was rubbish.
#notbuyingnikea4thtime.
speak ENGLISH WILL YA? (Score:2, Insightful)
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"Trainers" will make majority of Americans reach for a dictionary
I fail to see the downside here. It's also not slang, it's just the word we use.
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I fail to see the downside here. It's also not slang, it's just the word we use.
It's a word used by a small minority of English speakers. It's not a literary word. It's a slang used when talking to an audience which has not idea what it is. And it was used in the title of an article about a global company -- not a local event (which might have justified the usage). In the US it's considered British slang. It will not show up if you try to look it up by typing "define trainers" in Google search bar. If you try to lookup "soda" in the same manner (which is a colloquialism for "carb
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I'm American. I hear "trainers", I think "British English athletic shoes". it's not a huge mental jump, and it doesn't hurt anyone to know what other countries call things.
It's not as if it's written in Mandarin.
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That got your point across well enough before making yourself look foolish.
Yeah, that's how we got to "Nature" allowing itself to use "maths" as an accepted usage. That was my line in the sand. Its existence changes the impression of what is "math" for those who use "math" as a the normative short form. I may know the difference and yo
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I would say: just try the Google lookup of "define trainers" for yourself.
I did, and the first hit was http://dictionary.cambridge.or... [cambridge.org], which gives as definition:
"a person who teaches skills to people or animals and prepares them for a job, activity, or sport:" and
"[ C usually plural ] (UK) (UK also training shoe, US sneaker) a type of light, comfortable shoe that can be worn for sport"
The second and third hit are directly for "trainers", not "trainer", and give
"A British slang word for Shoes." and
"plural
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""Trainers" will make majority of Americans reach for a dictionary"
Good! It will be the start of a new and better world for them.
Little tip for you: English is the language of England, the largest country in Britain (I won't go over the differences between UK, GB and all the rest of it here as that's outside the scope of the question), so common usage there means it is not slang. The majority of what is laughably called "US English" is, in fact, slang; it is illiterate and syntactically broken beyond repai
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Little tip for you: English is the language of England
Little tip for you: German (or maybe Russian) would be the language of England if it weren't for the US. British English is cute, at best. Proper American pronunciation is universally considered the normative English pronunciation. And so is proper American usage. Oh, and that little "blessed" plot, that realm -- The England -- would long know no King or Queen were it not for the generosity and spirit of these colonials it formerly thought to subjugate.
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LOL at jocks! (Score:1)
So Adidas is making a few recycled shoes the one says they hope that "and union? I knew nicks wearing Adidas shoes were dumb, but WOW! I wonder how many barrels of oil Adidas burned to retrieve those few pounds of recyclable plastic.
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Wow..my mobile spell checker made a mess of that. Enjoy laughing at me.
I meant to say:
"So Adidas is making a few recycled shoes and the title of the article says they hope that "will end pollution?" I knew jocks wearing Adidas shoes were dumb, but WOW! I wonder how many barrels of oil Adidas burned to retrieve those few pounds of recyclable plastic."
Also, hey, Slashdot, fix your $^#@ site so it works on Android. This is 2017, not 2007.
Greenwash (Score:1)