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posted 07/01/10 10:20 AM | updated 07/01/10 10:21 AM
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Amazon Adopts Kozmic Tote, Starbucks Goes Compostable & Microsoft Cries Uncle on Kin

By Michael van Baker
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TechFlash sees afterimages of Webvan in Amazon's new Tote delivery service, but I can't help thinking of the gold standard: Kozmo.com couriers delivering lunch half an hour after I ordered it. Tote won't be quite that fast, but from a cost perspective, Amazon has one-upped Kozmo: the twice-weekly Tote service is free, and there's no minimum spend. (You do have to complete your order two days before the next delivery date.)

If you order something from Amazon and you'd like them to deliver it the next time they're delivering in your neighborhood (the delivery days are zip code-specific), they'll truck it on over. The first zip to get Tote is 98112. The Tote bags are weather-resistant and reusable, and one way you can reuse them is to return items if there's any problem. Get the Tote FAQs here. (Perhaps you'd like to order a discounted Kindle? Even the Kindle DX has a lower price.)

Meanwhile, today inaugurates 1) a City of Seattle ordinance mandating that all single-use food service packaging at restaurants and grocery stores be either recyclable or compostable, and 2) a fully operational battlestar Starbucks recycling and composting program that incorporates front-of-store waste, too (i.e., there are more bins out front).

You've probably seen evidence of this, since Starbucks has been rolling out the new program at its 90 Seattle stores over the past month. The city's goal is to keep 6,000 tons of packaging and compostable waste out of landfills each year. Starbucks' goal is to get front-of-store recycling into all company-owned locations by 2015. (Their paper cups will head back to the plant for a second life as paper napkins.)

Starbucks has taken some heat from environmental groups like As You Sow in the past--they hand customers some 10 million plastic and paper cups per day--so this ought to result in some happy green faces.

Just days after Verizon knocked down the price of both Microsoft's Kin One and Kin Two "underpowered smartphones," Microsoft admitted defeat. They introduced Kin for about a month, but very few people wanted to say hello. The Kin is dead, reports the BBC, and Microsoft is doubling down on Windows Phone 7.

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If only
If only all those unsold Kins were compostable - we'd have a double win, and Starbucks be damned. Well, they probably will be damned anyway.
Comment by bilco
3 weeks ago
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