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#41
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In message , at 12:55:02
on Tue, 3 Aug 2010, David Cantrell remarked: Don't know about you, but these days I find out where someone is by typing their postcode into Google Maps or my sat-nav. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ------------------- ^^^^^^^^^^ Ad you think that would still work if we had a two-tier (continental style) address model in the UK? Of course it would, given that it works in the rest of Europe. Sure, you don't type in the postcode, but Tomtom on my phone knows *exactly* where to find most of my continental friends. eg ... hit "Navigate to", "Address", select Germany from the list of countries, type five letters to find the town, Have they avoided having (the equivalent of) half a dozen towns called "Newport", or does it show some (equivalent of) County information to help sort out one from the other? type three letters to find the street, it then asks me for the house number and directs me right to their front door. You seem to be *not* typing the German postcode into your TomTom. Typing in the street address is all very well, but this is a discussion about postcodes. This is actually quicker than, in the UK, typing in the entire postcode (with irritating switches between letters and numbers) and the house number. My satnav doesn't require me to change between letters and numbers in order to enter a UK postcode. But nor do I have my satnav with me at all times, so I cannot rely upon it (in the absence of county information in someone's address that I am trying to locate). -- Roland Perry |
#42
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![]() On Aug 3, 8:57*am, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 18:35:57 on Mon, 2 Aug 2010, remarked: Try Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ. Postcodes define points for deliver of mail, not a large sprawl of buildings covering a large chunk of central Cambridge. When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. Well, addresses like '2 Stowage, SE8 3EE' are pretty short and should work. But they don't quite have the same class, that's for sure! |
#43
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In message
, at 06:14:05 on Tue, 3 Aug 2010, Mizter T remarked: When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. Well, addresses like '2 Stowage, SE8 3EE' are pretty short and should work. But they don't quite have the same class, that's for sure! 'BBC, W1A 1AA' is both short and classy too ... it's just having the opportunity to be able to use them (for one's own address) ![]() -- Roland Perry |
#44
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![]() On Aug 3, 2:47*pm, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 06:14:05 on Tue, 3 Aug 2010, Mizter T remarked: When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. Well, addresses like '2 Stowage, SE8 3EE' are pretty short and should work. But they don't quite have the same class, that's for sure! 'BBC, W1A 1AA' is both short and classy too ... it's just having the opportunity to be able to use them (for one's own address) HM Queen/King, SW1A 1AA... though rumour has it that there's a high degree of nepotism involved in getting that gig. |
#45
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#46
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In uk.transport.london message YEm5o.25446$RO5.25424@hurricane, Sun, 1
Aug 2010 23:35:36, Richard J. posted: Because our postcode system has a far finer resolution than most other countries, and therefore enables greater automation and efficiency in Royal Mail (in theory), as well as enabling many other applications such as satnav and location finding on online maps. Why would you want to degrade our excellent postcode system? The postcode system ideally suits the postal authorities, and no-one else very much. The second part is more-or-less arbitrary, being designed for final sorting and delivery - few people could say where most second-halves referred to, even within their local first-half, except for those that they actually post to or from. Sorting machines in 2010 can have enormously more memory and computing power than those dating from the beginning of coded sorting; it would be perfectly easy to give each named neighbourhood a coded form recognisable as built from country, county, city/town/village, neighbourhood (and recognisable different from postcode first-halves). Then those could be allowed on letters, and translated by look-up in RAM into as much of the existing code as appropriate. The coding would be more easily recognisable, and could be used for other purposes. -- (c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. Turnpike v6.05. Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - w. FAQish topics, links, acronyms PAS EXE etc : URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/programs/ - see 00index.htm Dates - miscdate.htm estrdate.htm js-dates.htm pas-time.htm critdate.htm etc. |
#47
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On 2010-08-03, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 18:35:57 on Mon, 2 Aug 2010, remarked: Try Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ. Postcodes define points for deliver of mail, not a large sprawl of buildings covering a large chunk of central Cambridge. When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. surname, suburb worked for us when I were a nipper, though mostly we put the road in, and later, a direction. Eric |
#48
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Eric wrote on 03 August 2010 19:27:30 ...
On 2010-08-03, Roland wrote: In messageeL6dnWfi1ubAy8rRnZ2dnUVZ8gSdnZ2d@giganews. com, at 18:35:57 on Mon, 2 Aug 2010, remarked: Try Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ. Postcodes define points for deliver of mail, not a large sprawl of buildings covering a large chunk of central Cambridge. When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. surname,suburb worked for us when I were a nipper, though mostly we put the road in, and later, a direction. Presumably your surname isn't Jones and you didn't live in Wales. Even the road wouldn't help much in some parts of Wales. My father-in-law during WW2 had an entire platoon of soldiers all named Jones. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#49
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On 03/08/2010 13:32, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 12:55:02 on Tue, 3 Aug 2010, David Cantrell remarked: Don't know about you, but these days I find out where someone is by typing their postcode into Google Maps or my sat-nav. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ------------------- ^^^^^^^^^^ Ad you think that would still work if we had a two-tier (continental style) address model in the UK? Of course it would, given that it works in the rest of Europe. Sure, you don't type in the postcode, but Tomtom on my phone knows *exactly* where to find most of my continental friends. eg ... hit "Navigate to", "Address", select Germany from the list of countries, type five letters to find the town, Have they avoided having (the equivalent of) half a dozen towns called "Newport", or does it show some (equivalent of) County information to help sort out one from the other? There is /Main and /Oder for Frankfurt, and various X im Y names. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#50
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On 03/08/2010 15:57, Tim Roll-Pickering wrote:
wrote: I can think of some addresses where you could be some distance from your intended destination. Try Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ. Postcodes define points for deliver of mail, not a large sprawl of buildings covering a large chunk of central Cambridge. And of course there's the nightmare of courier firms trying to deliver to those sorts of addresses. I don't know if it's the case in Cambridge but a lot of universities have a tendency to use a single postcode for the entire campus. Cambridge doesn't have a campus. Unless you are a dodgy looking tourist, in which case it is that way --- The colleges each have their own postcodes, though Name, College, Cambridge is pretty much certain to work (unless there are two people with the same name there), and there will be a porter to collect whatever it is. I guess there might be a problem if you are getting a big heavy thing which needs to be delivered to a very specific place. The system used to break with firms which couldn't cope with multiple names at one address, but hopefully that is generally fixed these days - one electronics firm used to send all orders to whoever had placed the first ever order from that address, so there would be messages circulating saying things like "whoever ordered the left-handed grommit from ACME, it's in my pigeon hole, from Fred Bloggs". -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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