New boarding on London's buses
On 03/06/2020 21:15, Recliner wrote:
Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote:
Rolf Mantel wrote:
Am 03.06.2020 um 16:14 schrieb Anna Noyd-Dryver:
There was a thing on the news the other day about bookshops reopening, the
suggestion being that any item touched by a customer would need to be wiped
down and also quarantined for 72 hours. Presumably the same would apply to
shoes? (Genuine question: presumably large supermarkets still have their
clothing departments open, how are they managing?)
In Germany where all shops are open again, H&M have a "try on at home"
policy, so what's advantage is left compared to mail order?
I remember when I was younger, being surprised that M&S in Bolton didn't
have rooms to try on clothes (because you were expected to take things home
to try them on) but M&S in Llandudno did (because people generally
travelled further to get there).
Weren't changing rooms a dangerous innovation for ever-conservative M&S?
Made them more susceptible to shop-lifters.
--
Graeme Wall
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