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How Steve Jobs Got Green Overnight
Posted by
CowboyNeal
on Sat Sep 30, 2006 10:23 AM
from the change-in-plans dept.
from the change-in-plans dept.
Francois writes "At Apple's last special event, Steve Jobs insisted on how environment friendly Apple's new iPod packagings are supposed to be. I don't think he's ever gone that route before. 'We've got some new packagings for the new Nano as well. And it's 52% less volume. This turns out to be an environmentally great thing. Because it dramatically reduces the amount of fossil fuels we have to spend to move these things around the planet.'
Not only is it obvious they shrank the packaging to reduce the cost of shipping around the planet and sell lower than the Zune, but furthermore: there's a reason why he insisted that much, and it's not so very nice."
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How Steve Jobs Got Green Overnight
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Mirror? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Probably fud anyway, but hey - I like to read rumor mongering too.
Re:Mirror? (Score:5, Informative)
Bogus (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://prometheus.med.utah.edu/~bwjones/ | Last Journal: Friday November 09, @08:01PM)
Additionally, they make no evidence or justification on how they establish their weightings of their criteria to determine ranking.
Re:Bogus (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://sheelab.homecreatures.com/)
Let's say you release mercury into a river. By the time the effects become painfully obvious it'll be already too late: you'll have poisoned fish, and lots of poisoned people who ate that fish, it'll have had a great effect on the ecology of the area...
So I understand Greenpeace's idea as "Even if we're not sure right now, let's be careful with unknown chemicals now, lest we have to figure it out the hard way".
There are actual examples of why being paranoid is a good thing. For instance, Thalidomide [wikipedia.org]
Re:Bogus (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://sheelab.homecreatures.com/)
Kelsey (the FDA scientist that evaluated thalidomide) had an amazing luck: She was given something that was actually very harmful. She was pressured by both the company and her superiors to just approve it, but she didn't give in. She became a hero when the truth was known.
However, if it turned out to have been actually harmless, she'd have very possibly been demoted instead. Very few people would have seen it as a job well done in that case.
That's the problem really, being careful is a very, very good thing as the case of thalidomide shows. But people only understand that when they see an example in action. Had it been harmless, she'd have been seen as annoying and stubborn instead, if she remained with the FDA chances are further objections from her would be ignored, and perhaps something even worse would have been approved without oversight.
The gatorade example is bad, anyway. Gatorade, AFAIK, doesn't contain anything very strange, and an isotonic solution is made of completely normal things (water, salt, sugar, orange juice or banana IIRC). Now if you've got some new ingredient that was made in a lab, I'd rather wait than risk being poisoned.
Re:Bogus (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bogus (Score:4, Insightful)
The Precautionary Principle is also logically fallacious, because it is impossible to prove a negative. Prove you aren't an alien life form. Go on, prove it. I can create objections to each and every argument you give based on untested (and untestable) possibilities.
Furthermore, it is a blind alley for environmental activism. There are many known hazardous substances with less-harmful alternatives in wide use today. Preemptively banning new AIDS drugs to prevent another Thalidomide will only distract from real health and ecological improvements.
Righteous (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/~Doc%20Ruby/journal | Last Journal: Thursday March 31 2005, @01:48PM)
emphasis mine.
They simply say that when evidence says some chemicals are risky, we should eliminate its use, even if proof of the harmful extent is impossible before it does the damage at risk.
You know, the way you avoid getting killed, even though no one can prove that you're going to hell.
The entire prudence of this Precautionary Principle rests on how to evaluate the evidence of risk. Once that's established, of course you stop before you might break something. Every 5 year old learns that. It's time we stopped letting our corporations work like bulls in our china shop.
Re:Righteous (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://slashdot.org/~Doc%20Ruby/journal | Last Journal: Thursday March 31 2005, @01:48PM)
So there's yet another layer being conflated into bashing Greenpeace. There's evidence, risk, and harm. Their policy says evidence of risk, even without evidence of harm, means we shouldn't use the risky chemicals. Which sounds like a completely sensible policy, that we all use in our own lives. But if Greenpeace acts outside that policy, against chemicals (or, by extension, other products) without even evidence of risk, then there's a different argument, about whether Greenpeace even follows its own policy.
FWIW, "head in the sand" describes people who ignore risk as well as people who fear it despite evidence its harm is negligible. And our litigious/risk-averse society is commensurately full of irresponsible harm and ignored risks. Mostly to the benefit of chemical corps which risk and harm us with impunity. The unnecessary lawsuits are mostly exploiting oversimplification of even basic complexities like evidence/risk/harm evaluation. And the risk aversion is much more characteristic of corporations than of humans, as you can tell from the balance of lawsuits.
Already Slashdotted (Score:2)
Slashdotted in record time (Score:4, Funny)
Slashdotted on the weekend? (Score:4, Informative)
(http://megatron.princeton.edu/)
The greenpeace link [greenpeace.org]
Rebuttal (Score:5, Informative)
(Last Journal: Tuesday October 09, @06:49AM)
Real greens would dump the consumerist iPod (Score:5, Funny)
Apple should migrate to a new system (Score:4, Interesting)
This does go against their direct shipping to the customer from the factory system they currently operate.
However the small packaging for the nano is a good first step. Also the turnover on Apple computer hardware tends to be less than PC hardware - people will keep an Apple running for a year or two more than a PC in general. Of course there will those of us running 12 year old SparcStations as print servers and old P200s as routers, but generally people replace PCs when the old one gets slow for whatever reason. Lower turnover means less hardware being recycled overall.
More information from a non-/.ed site... (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.ganfamily.com/)
Since the article site is so clearly slashdotted, here's a related article from MacObserver.com entitled Greenpeace Hazardous Material Report Slams Apple [macobserver.com].
Re:More information from a non-/.ed site... (Score:5, Interesting)
To me, Greenpeace seems about as trustworthy as PETA at the moment.
Aha... (Score:5, Funny)
2. As evidence, cite a link that is already down -- people will assume it's slashdotted.
3. People don't know what you're claiming, but a negative cloud surrounds their image of Apple.
4. Next time, they'll buy a Zune! Yeah! (aka: profit)
Re:Aha... (Score:5, Interesting)
Weeks old FUD (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.roughlydrafted.com/RD/Home/E83D58B3-10
Smug Alert! (Score:2, Funny)
Oh please... (Score:1, Flamebait)
(http://www.neolibrarium.com/ | Last Journal: Friday January 10 2003, @11:19AM)
Apple is reacting to GREENPEACE???
I guess we should be on the lookout now for Lenovo, Acer, Motorola and the others in the bottom of the list to hold press conferences touting how "green" their companies are. As if they take Greenpeace seriously. This blog is bullshit.
This is a business decision. Pure and simple.
---------------
A Thinker's Hangout [webcogito.com]
Apple's trump on environment (Score:2)
(http://in2mind.blogspot.com/)
Stop buying ipods if you want to be green (Score:2)
If you really want to be green, just keep your old ipod. It's good enough.
Nothing ulterior that I see (Score:2, Insightful)
(http://umich.edu/~jamec | Last Journal: Thursday October 18, @08:11PM)
So Apple realized they suck at environmentally-friendly products, and now they're trying fix it. Would it have been better had Apple done nothing?
Yes, their motive is not altruistic; it's mostly marketing. Apple is a for-profit corporation, after all. Is a focus on image something new for Apple? Or for any company? Not really.
Al Gore (Score:1)
This is news??? (Score:2)
(http://www.dartmouth.edu/rah)
Does anyone seriously believe... (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone seriously believe... (Score:4, Informative)
(http://sheelab.homecreatures.com/)
Statistics from Wikipedia: $360 million revenue, 1800 employees, estimated 2.8M supporters.
Whatever you think about Greenpeace, the fact is that they're far from being insignificant.
New package probably worse. (Score:2)
(http://assembler.org/)
Steve Jobs == Enviro-conscous (Score:2)
My close friend and Greenpeace founder will have nothing to do with what become of his protest against logging practices in Canada for Greenpeace strongarm tactics.
Nice :) (Score:1)
(http://ghostbar.ath.cx/ | Last Journal: Sunday June 10, @09:21PM)
Mirror (Score:1)
(http://ankur.homelinux.com/ | Last Journal: Tuesday November 07 2006, @11:32PM)
Trans Fat in Apple Newtons (Score:2, Funny)
(http://www.5sigma.com/joseph)
I say BS (Score:3, Informative)
(Last Journal: Tuesday October 09, @06:49AM)
About the the inconsistencies and outright lies in Greenpeace' report read this [roughlydrafted.com], this [roughlydrafted.com] and this [roughlydrafted.com].
Steve Jobs and environmental issues (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.pobox.com/~meta/ | Last Journal: Sunday February 29 2004, @09:19AM)
Then Jobs returned to Apple, and suddenly everything had to be in glossy boxes, so it looked cool.
So yeah, I believe that Apple under Jobs has a bad environmental record.
Do the Editors Read the Site? (Score:2, Informative)
(http://www.dockingbay94.net/ | Last Journal: Saturday March 03 2007, @03:18PM)
Now, several weeks later, an article is posted referencing some guy's blog who has just now discovered the Greenpeace report and wants to pontificate on why Steve Jobs mentioned environmental concerns in his keynote. Why is this on Slashdot? It's old news, and it's been proven FUD.
Something that might be interesting, though, is whether or not Steve added the environmental bit to the speech because he was miffed at the obviously biased greenpeace report. He probably wanted to get Apple's concern for the environment into the press releases, which he succeeded at doing. This helped overwhelm any bad press Apple may have gotten earlier. Jobs knows his shit, and his small blurb about packaging achieved just the result he was looking for.
Not overnight (Score:2)
(http://www.micheldonais.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday May 04 2005, @09:17PM)
Including the discovery of the "oh so new" page for Environment. Strange that I used to visit that page back then
http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.apple.com
2004 huh? Yep, I'd say it's overnight.
Psychotic Rant (Score:2, Offtopic)
Let me just say that most people aren't really serious about being "green." If they were, they'd just STOP being consumer whores altogether. However, being green is en vogue and cool. Why? Because all of the efforts and publicity stunts done by Greenpeace and their compadres are nothing more than fertilizer for the "green marketing" corporate marketing spin doctors come up with to sell more products that aren't really any better for the environment than before. If you're "green," congratulations; you're now a front-and-center marketing demographic. All that marketing plays up to your green sympathies and they guilt you into buying anything with a "green" sticker the've re-branded just for you.
Greenpeace activists seem to think that they're making a difference but I don't think they are anything more than unemployed idealists who hate authority. I don't mean to sound like a Philistine Republican but, c'mon--you people look like a bunch of kooks. Organizations that do all kinds of crazy stunts (that are oftentimes, ironically, hazardous to the environment) lose their message in the medium.
Apple's new "green" marketing plan is nothing more than damage control. They know that most consumers don't truly care and that a "green" sticker on the box makes them feel better about their purchase.
Even if my Macs and my iPod are full of poisons and environmental hazards, it's ultimately up to me, the consumer, to dispose them properly or have them recycled. That's really the problem--people who throw shit away that shouldn't be in the landfill.
Obvious joke (now that I've had a beer) (Score:2)
(http://mistshadow2k4.deviantart.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday May 31 2006, @02:37PM)
Is there a point that I'm missing? (Score:3, Insightful)
(http://www.davidconnell.com/)
Recycling (Score:2)
Greener than Gore (Score:2, Offtopic)
(http://www.anotherblogger.com/)
Err... Batteries? (Score:3, Insightful)
The iPod's nearly seamless design results in there being no easy way to actually replace the battery, which means that doing so is either extremely difficult or (reportedly) ends up with them just tossing away the old iPod and replacing it.
That is extremely wasteful environmentally, and from a design perspective it's outstandingly dumb. Who in their right mind designs an expensive electronic device which uses batteries that are so enclosed and unreachable that replacing them is a futile effort?
I can't think of many other things that are like this, that depend on single tiny time limited components whose absence renders the entire thing useless. One of these things is a light bulb. The difference? Light bulbs are cheap, they actually need to be completely enclosed, and there is an ongoing effort to make them as environmentally sound as possible.
Huh? (Score:2)
Greenpeace issued a report ranking manufacturers according to how "green" they are. In response, one of the companies decided to change their packaging to increase their rank.
That is the whole point of such rankings and Greenpeace PR campaigns. It looks like it worked. Good for them.
greenpeace is always right! (Score:2)
(Last Journal: Wednesday May 16, @12:43PM)
Numbers lie (Score:2, Informative)
(http://ryanh.us/ | Last Journal: Tuesday April 30 2002, @10:07PM)
1.) The Nano packaging is quite small as it is. Volume is not the major factor when calculating the fossil fuel required to ship these things from the asian sweatshops to the apple stores around the world. Weight is the key factor.
2.) The heaviest part of a nano package is the nano itself. I don't own a nano, but my shuffle (a gift from an employer) came with an overgrown instruction manual, which was actually the heaviest part of that package. I imagine that the nano contains a similar manual. The outer packaging materials were awfully light compared to the contents tiny contents.
3.) Volume and surface area (and thus, packaging weight) do not vary linearly. A 52% reduction in overall volume does not equal even half a reduction in packaging weight.
If the reduction in package weight due to this green-ification were even remotely significant, Jobs would have quoted that number. Instead, he got us all to ooh, and ah at a big, insignificant number.
**rethinking here**
i suppose that a 52% reduction in volume does mean that they can ship these things across the ocean in about half as many containers. If the weight of a container's worth of nano boxes is insignificant in comparison to the weight of the actual container, then perhaps my previous argument is incorrect since the additional container weight will be saved. However, if the weight of the nano boxes is significant, then we're still only seeing a fossil fuel efficiency increase of 20-30%. Don't get me wrong, that's nothing to sneeze at, but I wish they'd quote a number with REAL meaning, rather than the bigger, but insignificant, number.
This all reminds me of a car commercial in San Antonio (where dumb math rules) that advertises, "Did you know that for every mile per hour you drive over 60, your fuel prices go up by 13 cents per gallon." (Disclaimer: My memory of the quote probably suffers minor inconsistencies with the actual quote, but the I took care not to change the concept at all.) Everytime I see that commercial, I just want to call them up and ask how they arrived at that $0.13/gallon figure.
Apple recycled (Score:2)
How Steve Jobs got green overnight? (Score:1)
(Last Journal: Monday July 09, @08:53PM)
G'peace or Chinese labor? (Score:1)
(Last Journal: Tuesday February 07 2006, @12:48PM)
I think it has to do with the Chinese manufacturing the iPod, sleeping 100 in a dorm, getting $50 a month.
If he can't do anything about that
Help Apple be greener... (Score:1)
Should we care? (Score:2)
(http://www.burntelectrons.org/ | Last Journal: Monday September 10, @02:46PM)
"overnight" (Score:1)
(http://www.algorithman.de/)
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/08/28/11120
I wonder if Apple had changed anything if that report had gotten no attention by the media
Europeans prefer less packaging (Score:2)
Re:Yay Slashdot! (Score:1, Offtopic)
(http://mistshadow2k4.deviantart.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday May 31 2006, @02:37PM)
Damn, I didn't know that was what /. was for. I need to get new batteries for my vibrator. Uh, btw, where is there anything worth masturbating to on this site? I don't see any tied-up, helpless pretty boys or anything....
(Just because I like Linux doesn't mean I think everything Torvalds says is golden. Also, I only bothered to read this because I'm that bored while I wait for the liquor store to open -- for some stupid reason they don't open on Saturday until noon.)
Re:More FUD (Score:1)
I assume you didn't mean to say it's irrelevant just because it affects Chinese children instead of your own children.
Go look at the dirty stuff:
http://www.greenpeace.org/apple/about.html [greenpeace.org]
http://www.greenpeace.org/apple/itox.html [greenpeace.org]