Coin operated vending machines dispensing kibble for streetcats are my favourite shared infrastructure discovery this week.
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@robchapman to be clear, it's not the municipal machines. They're alternative, smaller, and I _think_ donation only. I think the internals were only collecting the bottles for the charity to redeem, not shredding like the municipal machines. The one near my home was 15-20m from a cluster of municipal machines.
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@cczona Ah they're not specifically for cat food, sadly. However many cat feeders collect BCRS vouchers to buy food for the strays, or for the cat sanctuaries. Before the country tightened its rules on money laundering, charity shops collected for the cats, now there are barely any charity shops as they all became registered thrift shops overnight which cut off a vital source of revenue for the people who voluntarily feed the strays here.
@robchapman this was 2 years ago but the one by my home definitely dispensed food. I was startled by how big the cascade was.
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Coin operated vending machines dispensing kibble for streetcats are my favourite shared infrastructure discovery this week.
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Coin operated vending machines dispensing kibble for streetcats are my favourite shared infrastructure discovery this week.
@jessie a societies wealth is be measured by its disposition towards the least among them.
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@robchapman to be clear, it's not the municipal machines. They're alternative, smaller, and I _think_ donation only. I think the internals were only collecting the bottles for the charity to redeem, not shredding like the municipal machines. The one near my home was 15-20m from a cluster of municipal machines.
@cczona sounds like it was a bottle drop to collect bottles, and then someone did the BCRS redeeming. It's a good idea, I've never seen bottle drop bins on Malta, but that's probably because people literally sift through other people's rubbish bags looking for redeemable bottles. I like that they want people to recycle bottles, but the scheme has simply created a raft of other problems
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Coin operated vending machines dispensing kibble for streetcats are my favourite shared infrastructure discovery this week.
@jessie There's a lot of uneaten kibble in the feeding tray though.

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@robchapman this was 2 years ago but the one by my home definitely dispensed food. I was startled by how big the cascade was.
@cczona It's likely still there then.
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@Robo105@mastodon.social @jessie@mastodon.social they knock them off tables
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@cczona sounds like it was a bottle drop to collect bottles, and then someone did the BCRS redeeming. It's a good idea, I've never seen bottle drop bins on Malta, but that's probably because people literally sift through other people's rubbish bags looking for redeemable bottles. I like that they want people to recycle bottles, but the scheme has simply created a raft of other problems
@robchapman locked bottle drop, but also kibble dispenser. The ferals in the neighborhood knew to watch anyone lingering near it, and converged on the freshly dispensed kibble as soon as you withdrew far enough to not be a threat anymore. Though the design seemed a bit flawed to me. It just dumped a bunch of kibble into an open bin that was exposed to the weather. So potentially dumping it on top of moldy food. One hopes the bin is scrubbed frequently.
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@jessie but how do the cats reach the coin slot?
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@robchapman to be clear, it's not the municipal machines. They're alternative, smaller, and I _think_ donation only. I think the internals were only collecting the bottles for the charity to redeem, not shredding like the municipal machines. The one near my home was 15-20m from a cluster of municipal machines.
@cczona @robchapman Hello Carina , trust you're doing good..?
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@cczona sounds like it was a bottle drop to collect bottles, and then someone did the BCRS redeeming. It's a good idea, I've never seen bottle drop bins on Malta, but that's probably because people literally sift through other people's rubbish bags looking for redeemable bottles. I like that they want people to recycle bottles, but the scheme has simply created a raft of other problems
@robchapman @cczona Hello
trust you're doing good Roe ? -
@robchapman locked bottle drop, but also kibble dispenser. The ferals in the neighborhood knew to watch anyone lingering near it, and converged on the freshly dispensed kibble as soon as you withdrew far enough to not be a threat anymore. Though the design seemed a bit flawed to me. It just dumped a bunch of kibble into an open bin that was exposed to the weather. So potentially dumping it on top of moldy food. One hopes the bin is scrubbed frequently.
@cczona @robchapman Can we share some helpful and useful ideas together?
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@dsilverman @codinghorror @jessie
I guessed this was Turkish because of exactly that
@Energetic_Nova @dsilverman @codinghorror @jessie Haha
Hello
I trust you are doing good? -
@futurebird @Robo105 @jessie yes lol
Hey I hope you are doing great on here .. -
@futurebird @jessie good point. Them and racoons
@Robo105 @futurebird @jessie Hey Robin
I trust you are doing good on here..? -
Average duration for a cat to find out how to guide a person to that machine: 0.01s
@wakame @futurebird @Robo105 @jessie Hello
How are you doing, trust you're doing good.. ? -
@jessie I love this from a shared social infrastructure framing - it's like we can feel street cats better than we can care for unhoused peopled

@KathyReid @jessie Hello
Kathy Reid I trust you are doing good.. ?
