McDonald’s installs phone cleaning devices.
The systems operate on the basis of ultraviolet technology.
These systems, powered by ultraviolet technology, destroy up to 99.9% of germs within 30 seconds while customers wash their hands.
So im no tech expert but a couple issues i see off the bat:
- relying on a mechanism to pull in and spit out your phone seems ripe for a failure where the phone gets jammed/caught/sterliser breaks mid-operation and your phone is stuck. Maybe instead have a shelf that you put you phone on and then a cover just swings/drops over it but you can physically just lift the cover up to remove the phone.
- entry slot is in the surface of the bench, directly next to the sink, where any overflow or splashing will have water drop directly down into steriliser and phone.
- having a device in a public place (with no cameras, because bathroom) is a perfect place for someone malicious to affix a NFC (or similar tech) scanner to read data from/send data to your phone.
For every country I’ve lived in outside of Japan, I think these would be valid concerns.
That’s really cool. I already foresee Americans intentionally breaking them and finding ways for people to get their phones stuck in there to be assholes and for internet likes.
Some Australian cities installed usb charging ports on their bus fleets. They were filled with chewing gum within a week
Qi chargers are the way to go imo. Make it out of some nice hard plastic and much more difficult to vandalize.
So many bathrooms in Japan don’t even have hand soap or toilet paper. I can’t possibly imagine this taking off.
?
I didn’t have this issue at all when I visited. Although maybe you’re talking more rural than touristy places…
No, I lived in Japan and have visited all over. It’s more an issue in men’s bathrooms than in women’s to not have soap, based on my conversations. In women’s bathrooms, it’s common to not have toilet paper, and people carry around tissues. This is more of a city thing than a rural thing. In the cities, people pass out tissue packets with advertisements in them (as a job) and people carry those around and use them in the restrooms.
Edit: It might be the case that places which have more tourists don’t have this problem as much. That’s still not my experience, however.
Ten years in Osaka here. I don’t recall this ever being an issue.
As I recall when I lived near Shizuoka, Osaka had a reputation for going their own way. The main difference I remember is getting off the train and everyone walked to the other side than typically done elsewhere. I would have liked more time in Osaka, it seemed more vibrant and open in some ways.
People are generally more open in Osaka and the food is excellent, if you go just a few streets off the key tourist traps…
I was just in Japan for about 4 months, mostly Tokyo. Id say somewhere around a quarter of public men’s rooms I used didn’t have soap dispensers. Taiwan was worse though - most baffling was the lack of soap on my plane to and from Taipei
Japan is doing it No way it works here
What? Am I not understanding you correctly?
No. The article is about Japan and I commented about Japan.
How well is that actually going to work? UVC sterilization usually takes much longer than 30 seconds.
WOTA claims 99.9% sterilization via UV-C. Does Japan have false advertising laws? I genuinely don’t see how it can be that fast, but like, it would be dumb to make difficult-to-believe claims if you could be sued for it.
Anyway, mostly unrelated, I used one of these there and I didn’t care if it was that effective. Wasn’t gonna be holding my phone for that span, so any sterilization is nice.
It’s dose dependent not just time dependent. LED uv-c emitters can pump a huge dose onto a surface from a short distance such as this device does.
This recent study showed viral inactivation using such shorter time frames.
I’ve seen these being marketed as the big new thing for ages. I think they had some on Shark Tank. Covid probably helped them along.
That’s weird, there’s a place 10 minutes away from me (W Europe) that has them installed in the bathrooms.
It’s just a slot in which you put your phone. You wait for it to beep and you take it out again. Ideally while you’re washing your hands.
I’ll “clean” your device! Just let me handle it for a few seconds…have you installed my app yet? It gives me…you, roo…hmmm cool powers and access to the cleaning system interface…yeah that’s right, I need access to the cleaning interface.
No thanks, I’d rather bring my own knowing what people would stick in there and there’s the risk of it stealing your phone if it malfunctions
It’s cool, I want to know how it works! But I don’t trust it. All it takes is an accidental moment of suction to destroy a microphone or moisture seal. Or maybe someone accidentally dropped a bobby pin or something in there that could damage the charging port? That’s all it would take to basically ruin my phone…
I also don’t trust the employees to care or know how to safely remove a phone if a motor died or the building lost power… But I realize I’m paranoid! 🤷♂️
It’s a bit narrow with lots of moving parts. Maybe a clamshell setup would be easier and more usable with different phone sizes / accessories?
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is the remaining 0.01% of bacteria becoming superbugs?
Not sticking my phone in there.
But but… It was made for me! Th-this is my hole!
Who are you that is so wise in the ways of not sticking things into anonymous slots?
Ooooooh iPhone 4s long time no see
Seems like a solution in search of a problem.
Does McDonalds have a device for eating my ass? They should work on that next.