Reusable water bottles: The new fast fashion?

Reusable water bottles: The new fast fashion?

Suivant

Video Game Console Wars

In the 1990s, the video game industry was locked in competition between gaming giants Sega and Nintendo, battling for dominance in living rooms around the world as they raced to deliver the best games on their consoles while attacking one another in advertising. This rivalry resh ...  Afficher plus

Headspace: from mindfulness app to military partner

Headspace started life as a mindfulness app. Now it's partnering with the US Navy and investing in artificial intelligence for mental health support.The company's CEO Tom Pickett speaks to us about therapy, the increasing role of technology, and tackling burnout at scale.If you'd ...  Afficher plus

Épisodes Recommandés

49. Should Bottled Water be Banned? (English Vocabulary Lesson)
Thinking in English

We drink millions of bottles of water every year. However, in some countries, including mine the UK, our tap water is perfectly safe! We don’t really need to buy bottled water! There are environmental, financial, and health costs connected to bottled water. Should bottled water b ...  Afficher plus

How we slashed our lab’s carbon footprint
Working Scientist

Analytical chemist Jane Kilcoyne was working in her biotoxin monitoring lab one day in 2018 when she noticed a bin overflowing with plastic waste. The observation prompted her to join forces with like-minded colleagues and develop a package of measures aimed at reducing their lab ...  Afficher plus

🥤 “Huge Millennial Water Bottle” — Stanley’s tumbler surge. The Ozempic Effect. Shrek’s music stock.
The Best One Yet

The #1 trending water bottle right now? It’s not Swell, Nalgene, or Klean Kanteen. It’s Stanley — Stanley sales are up 275% because of one “minnovation”.Ozempic is already being used by a shocking number of people — It’s not just a weight loss drug. It’s changing the entire econo ...  Afficher plus

Pourquoi les boissons gazeuses sont-elles meilleures en canette qu'en bouteille ?
Pourquoi donc ?

Si beaucoup trouvent que les boissons gazeuses (sodas, eaux pétillantes…) ont un goût meilleur en canette qu’en bouteille, ce n’est pas qu’une impression subjective : il y a des explications physiques, chimiques et sensorielles, dont la perméabilité est un facteur clé. Voici pour ...  Afficher plus