coke greenwashing

I supposedly swore off all soda products years ago, both diet and regular (I’d sworn off regular in my 40’s when my weight really began to get out of hand). But the flesh is weak in me, so yesterday, while shopping at a local Publix, I spotted a 20 oz (591 mL for you metric readers) diet Coke in a cooler in the store, and in spite of the outrageous cost of US$2.79 for that bottle of poison, I bought it and drank every last drop in a slightly crazed fashion. When I finished and reason had reasserted itself, I finally observed the bottle and noticed an interesting advertising twist:

Yes, that plastic Coke bottle is 100% recycled! It even has a little green ribbon across the bottom proclaiming its 100% recycling bonafides. Except… if you zoom in a bit and read the fine print on that green ribbon:

Yes, it’s 100% recycled except for the thin plastic label it’s all printed on, and the cap (lawyer weasel words). Reading a bit more says to put the cap back on the bottle and throw it in the recycling bin. So I guess it’s still all good with regards to recycling. This isn’t the first time Coke came in recycled bottles.

I was born and raised in Atlanta, GA, the home of Coca Cola (a.k.a Coke) and was practically weaned on the stuff. Back In The Day, Coke was sold in glass bottles. When you finished your sugared cola you put the empty glass bottle into a rack next to the dispenser (after you put in your hard earned 10¢s into the Coke machine to buy the drink). A truck would come by on a fairly regular basis to resupply the dispenser and pick up all the empties. The empties would go back to the bottling plant where’d they’d get washed and sterilized and then refilled to go back out again. That was real recycling. If the bottle was damaged (broken) then they manufactured another out of glass, including from the broken pieces they could collect. As the years passed, the glass bottles gave way to cans (remember those pull tabs?), then eventually the plastic bottling we’ve all come to know and despise.

So now they want to convince me that after decades (and decades) of generating all this single-use plastic waste, that they’ve somehow Found The Righteous Way and gone back to recycling. Which I call out as bullshit. They could have done this from the beginning, but they didn’t because it wasn’t convenient. And I suspect they’re doing it now because a lot of us aren’t blindly purchasing Coca Cola products any longer like we used to. As I said, I started ramping down my consumption of diet sodas over a decade ago, and went hard core when I retired in January 2020. Every once in a while I’d buy a bottle, or if they were cheap enough, get a six pack from places like Walmart when they were on sale. Otherwise I’m drinking water/ice water, coffee (at breakfast) and my own brewed teas (primarily black). None of the brewed drinks take sugar or artificial sweeteners. I put a little bit of cream in my coffee, which has just enough natural sugar in it to take off the bitter edge. The tea is sweetener free.

Which leads to the other two equally important reasons I avoid sodas: cost and health. I’ve watched the cost of soda grow outrageously high over the years, and I’ve been reading report after report stating that the ingredients aren’t truly fit for human consumption. All sodas are a bad mix of environmental catastrophe, health, and wasteful spending. There is no reason to ever purchase and consume these products, except out of moral weakness like I showed.

iphone 16 experiences

I’ve had over a month to work with my iPhone 16 Pro Max with iOS 18.2.1 (the current release). Overall the experiences have been decent. Some experiences haven’t lived up to the hype (Apple Intelligence), but neither has anything leaped out as a must-needed new feature. They’re all nice-to-haves, but I could have lived without them with the current level of capability I had with my iPhone 11 Pro Max from 2019.

One nice-to-have feature is the ability to now put widgets on the home screen, as well as the ability to put any icon on to any location of the screen. In the past the iOS screen forced all the icons to line up, starting at the upper left corner, from left to right, then top to bottom. Now I can put widgets on the screen that allow me to read important information without having to open an associated app for that information. The two I’ve added to my home screen are Breathable, which gives me a meter for the Air Quality Index, or AQI, and Weather Strip, which gives me one of the best weather forecasting apps I’ve ever used.

My current widget setup

These sit up at the top. The AQI meter gives me the value where I live, in a very clear and convenient meter that shows how good or bad the value is, as well as the numeric value. The source of the data is the EPA, which is indicated by the small EPA logo at the upper left corner. The Weather Strip’s weather widget gives me a reasonably accurate three day forecast, as well as the current weather conditions where I live, which is Dr. Phillips, Florida. As a contrast, let’s set up the Apple weather widget in the place of Weather Strip and compare them.

The Apple weather widget is majority text, a lot of it at small font sizes that makes it difficult to read unless I pull the iPhone up close. What’s more, the Apple weather widget is giving me the local weather forecast for Orlando. I don’t live in Orlando. But because iOS only knows about Orlando, that’s all I get. The main app will allow me to select Dr. Phillips, which I’ve done, but that selection doesn’t transfer to the widget. The Apple weather widget also gives the AQI in tiny text, which I assume is Orlando, not near where I live. This is an example of an app trying to do too much, poorly duplicating what the AQI meter is doing.

There’s a bigger issue I have with the Apple weather app; it’s a hot mess, inaccurate at the best of times. Apple purchased Dark Sky, an app I used to use, in order to supposedly “incorporate” the best Dark Sky features into the Apple weather app. I’ve never seen a change for the better with the Apple weather app; in fact, in my use it’s only gotten worse over time. Thus I’ve gone to using the Weather Strip.

Apple Intelligence

Screenshot

I have not been impressed with Apple Intelligence. Not to beat up just Apple, I’ve not been impressed with any of the artificial intelligent products being pushed out by all the major AI players. Apple Intelligence has been inaccurate to the point where Apple slapped a BETA tag on Apple Intelligence symbol. All beta signifies to me is that Apple is admitting how buggy it is. As a consequence of all these shortcomings I’ve disabled Apple Intelligence on my iPhone. I discovered, rather to my delight, that once disabled I got a battery life boost. Battery life went from good with Apple Intelligence enabled to fantastic with Apple Intelligence disabled. I think that’s a quite fair trade; more battery life for turning off Apple Intelligence.

Speaking of turning features off, make sure you turn off Photo’s Enhanced Visual Search. The feature was introduced sometime during the iOS 18 updates, and it was enabled by default. Apple says Enhanced Visual Search is supposed to allow you to search for photos “using landmarks or points of interest” it will identify on your behalf. Apple will identify this on your behalf using a combination of on-device ML combined with cloud-based landmark dictionary. My problem is I don’t trust the software, and more significantly, I didn’t opt into this “feature.” I didn’t even know it was there until I read an article about it in The Register. I’ve turned it off, and frankly, I recommend you do the same.

Links

Apple auto-opts everyone into having their photos analyzed by AI for landmarkshttps://www.theregister.com/2025/01/03/apple_enhanced_visual_search/