Today, my daughter spilled orange juice on her Framework laptop. I was able to quickly disconnect the battery, unscrew everything and wipe all the juice. Laptop is working fine now, thanks to the Framework design.
A stark contrast with an HP laptop that died after the same daughter spilled sweet tea. There was no option for self-repair. It was possible to open the back lid and save the NVME, and that's pretty much it.
I once had a boss spill a banana smoothie/milkshake on a laptop, did much the same, stripped everything apart, washed everything off and left it to dry overnight before putting everything back together. (I remember not being too careful about it - after all, it was the boss's fault, and they can just get a new one if it's broken).
Surprisingly it all worked fine, apart from one thing... when attending meetings, they would turn the laptop ion at the start, and after about half an hour, someone would usually ask "Can anyone else smell banana?"
(I can't remember the model, but I think it was a small (like 10-12" or so) HP with an extremely slow, awful hard disk, maybe 1.8").
You are misattributing the blame and comparing sugar to oranges. Clearly, orange juice is a much more healthy drink, so spilling it results in less severe damage.
Yes, and even fresh-squeezed orange juice is pretty sugary, not to mention acidic. Maybe if it's super pulpy that could have something to do with slowing down liquid getting into crevices, but I doubt it.
It's a feasible hypothesis. But even if it was sweet tea again and some of the components died, I would have been able to replace them individually ([1]), instead of having to buy the whole new laptop.
A stark contrast with an HP laptop that died after the same daughter spilled sweet tea. There was no option for self-repair. It was possible to open the back lid and save the NVME, and that's pretty much it.
Framework > HP