• mechoman444
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    112 days ago

    Not true. My 2 year old just started daycare a few months back and the missus and I have been sick constantly. We’ve had all kinds of weird viruses, sores, ulcers, cough and rash.

    My God. Daycares are biological warfare.

    • @Machinist@lemmy.world
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      51 day ago

      Just wait until they start kindergarten.

      Hopefully your toilet is close enough to the tub or sink so you can puke out of both ends.

      Parenting is just wonderful.

    • @Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca
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      31 day ago

      This was a problem when my daughter was in a private dayhome, but a licensed dayhome has been a much better experience. Seems like they actually prioritize hand-washing and other hygiene practices. My kid gets sick at about a tenth of the previous rate.

  • These were a feature up into the mid 80’s in some places around here. They were for the most part pretty hygienic on the first pass. It was the asshole who would rewind them that made them bad.

  • @BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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    62 days ago

    I’ve only seen these used in the movie 12 Angry Men. That movie feels so modern in many ways that when there’s a scene in the washroom and one of the character uses these, I’m reminded that the movie came out in 1957

  • @pjwestin@lemmy.world
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    82 days ago

    I’m pushing 40 and I’ve only ever seen these in movies. I feel like they haven’t been in use since the 60s.

    • @untorquer@lemmy.world
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      31 day ago

      I did see them around as a child millenial. Not totally uncommon in older and public buildings until early 2000’s. The airblade dryers seemed to come in right as the last of these were phased out.

        • I’m 30, and I’ve seen them twice in my life in-person. However, I believe that they were in very old buildings. Can’t remember exactly where, though, since they were both over ten years ago.

          • 30s checking in, local gas station had one up until 10 or 15 years ago. I moved, haven’t been back since to check if it’s still there 🤷‍♂️

            • @Fillicia@sh.itjust.works
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              12 days ago

              The shop I work with has one. Seeing these comments made me wonder if its the same rag from the 70s they just clean from time to time.

    • @Zenith@lemm.ee
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      21 day ago

      I’m 38 and the racetrack near my childhood home had these, they were always damp

    • Natanael
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      32 days ago

      I’m a millennial that has seen them in Sweden, but probably at least for not a decade or more by now.

    • @gerryflap@feddit.nl
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      11 day ago

      I’m Dutch and I’be seem plenty of these over the years. I can’t remember where tho, probably university and maybe highschool. I feel like they’re (or were) quite common

  • @cattywampas@lemm.ee
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    1453 days ago

    Contrary to popular belief, these don’t recycle the same length of cloth over and over. It goes from end to end l.

    • Ananääs
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      853 days ago

      They are probably the most hygienic option for public bathrooms (until the towel runs out).

          • bizarroland
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            163 days ago

            I remember pulling out new towels from my high school gym and them being already dirty.

            • Ananääs
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              233 days ago

              Maybe they didn’t replace the rolls in your school with clean ones and just put the dirty one back in? At least the modern towel machines don’t rotate the same roll.

        • @Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          So I’ve looked into these towel dispensers when I was learning about TENCEL and the company that makes it: Lenzing.

          Companies in Europe can take the dirty towels from these dispensers, bring them back to their warehouses where they have massive drums for laundering, as restock hotels and businesses as needed. It’s a pretty solid form of circularity.

          Then, when those towels reach their End of Life (EOL), Lenzing has agreements with these companies to accept the cotton towels for use in their production of TENCEL. The final fiber ends up being maybe 60-70% TENCEL (twisted cellulose) and 30-40% recycled cotton. Then that fiber is sold to make clothing, sheets, maybe even more towels (one could dream).

          Paper it definitely cheaper in terms of raw goods and processing, but you can’t control the waste stream. Sure, you can have garbage bins nearby, but people can toss whatever they want in there. Having a machine run through the towels means the user doesn’t have to think of care about disposal: only use. Really it’s a form of extended producer responsibility (EPR) which is the holy grail of recycling imo. Plus cotton feels better compared to paper imo

          Edit: another commenter spoke to the hygiene and convenience of it all. I agree that humans suck and so relying on a machine to work is a big ask given how little maintenance lots of places do. Shaking your hands dry is probably the most sustainable since you aren’t using any materials

    • The problem with them is that it’s up to the owner of the facility to make sure they are removed and cleaned in a timely manner, not simply re-rolled dirty towel, and the machine was in good repair and didn’t jam.

      Quite often that wasn’t the case, so you’d wind up with dirty towel recycling or stuck.

      Yes, this absolutely contributed to the spread of disease. No way it couldn’t. I had a family member in the medical field and said that the reason we didn’t see them anymore much past the ‘80s is because they were unhygienic thanks to the aforementioned issues.

      So it’s not really the fault of the towel, it’s the fact that people are cheap bastards and don’t keep things serviced, clean, and maintained. It’s better to grumble and shake your hands dry rather than continue to use a jammed, soiled towel machine.

    • ohellidk
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      253 days ago

      Yeah, then I think it’s washed and replaced.

      • Apathy Tree
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        193 days ago

        There was a bar near me that still had one of these things until quite recently, and yeah it was always on the ground and gross and stuff. I just used a napkin the few times I went there.

        But then they had a fire and got rid of them. Now they have a freestanding roll of paper towel that’s always wet and falling on the floor which is much better…

      • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        22 days ago

        Can’t say I’ve experienced this a lot. I’ve seen it happen but those are exceptions. Even in public restrooms they’re kept in good condition.

  • Die Martin Die
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    62 days ago

    Is that some kind of joke I’m too living-in-a-third-world-country to understand?

    (Honestly, no idea what that is. Is it some kind of towel?)

    • @Soapbox@lemmy.zip
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      122 days ago

      Yes. It’s a reusable towel system for drying hands in a public bathroom. It’s basically a really long roll of cloth that is supposed to get pulled down as its used and goes down into another rolld and washed and put back. I haven’t seen one in a really long time.

        • @Soapbox@lemmy.zip
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          182 days ago

          In theory, if it worked correctly, it should be hygenic and better for the environment. But as other commenters have mentioned, in reality they get jammed alot and so the same wet section gets used over and over. Or the owners don’t actually wash the roll and it just gets respooled and put back when dry.

          • Natanael
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            62 days ago

            You could do something clever with UV light possibly, but still. There’s going to be plenty of traces of crap on them even if all bacteria is dead

  • JelleWho
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    192 days ago

    I hate those “dryers” who just blow it all straight into your face much more

  • @salvaria@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    483 days ago

    Every bathroom in my high school had them… The worst was when they were jammed and you tried to dry your hands on the already sopping wet stuck section 🤢

    • Somewhiteguy
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      393 days ago

      That was the end of the roll. It wasn’t a continuous loop, just 100-ish feet of towel that they needed to wash periodically.

    • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      112 days ago

      I’m learning from this thread that people have had bad experiences more from shit maintenance than anything else

  • @batmaniam@lemmy.world
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    143 days ago

    I recently talked to someone who’s small family business was in their 3rd generation of making these. What they said is that there was a big market in south east Asia.

    Like we learned early covid, a lot of hygienic paper goods are made locally (not worth enough to ship), and they said that there just aren’t as many trees to make paper from there, so despite being very far away, this little family shop made and shipped these.

    The person I talked to wasn’t involved in the business directly, so they/I might have some of that wrong but I thought that was interesting. Like I guess it’s enough to keep them in business but probably not enough to attract new comers?