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#811
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Miles Bader writes:
Phil writes: Miles Bader writes: As Brewers law states, the quality of the beer is inversely proportional to the price. Hmm, I don't think I've _ever_ lived in a place where that's true... It is almost always true, posh hotels very rarely sell proper beer, and if they do it use usually something bland and not very well kept. It is usually just lager and keg beer. Go to a local pub however and the beer will be proper, often local. No doubt, but that doesn't generalize -- the cheapest beer is still typically the nastiest (bars/pubs where the emphasis is on "get you drunk / get in a fight"). I was refering to the price of the accomodation rather than the beer. Some of the best places to stay are pubs that have a few rooms. On personal trips the CAMRA Good Beer Guide has never let me down when finding somewhere to stay. In my experience, the price of beer doesn't vary much within a region, and in 30 plus years of beer drinking I have never seen, let alone been involved in a fight in a pub. The places where the emphasis is on getting drunk usually only sell lager or gas beer, call themselves bars and are in converted shops. Phil |
#812
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In message , at 20:21:10 on Sat, 10 Mar 2012,
Phil remarked: As Brewers law states, the quality of the beer is inversely proportional to the price. Hmm, I don't think I've _ever_ lived in a place where that's true... It is almost always true, posh hotels very rarely sell proper beer, and if they do it use usually something bland and not very well kept. It is usually just lager and keg beer. Go to a local pub however and the beer will be proper, often local. And the cheaper beer in that local pub won't be as good as the more expensive beer. The only general rule is that "places with a high average price" might be serving worse beer, but even that is suspect. I went to a lovely rural pub for lunch a couple of weeks ago, and the beer was well kept and delicious. The only problem was they wanted £4/pint for it. A week later I was paying under £2 a pint in a City Centre pub, for beer that was pretty much the same quality (but certainly not noticeably better). -- Roland Perry |
#813
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In message , at 20:56:00 on Sat, 10 Mar 2012,
Phil remarked: Roland Perry writes: I use data on the move a lot. And was very disappointed on a recent trip to London when several times I could get a 2.5G signal, and "connect", but data was extremely slow (order of a few bytes per second). Often in the middle of cities the networks can get very congested, if you want to stream radio to your phone you are better off in the suburbs. I only want to collect my email. I am suprised you needed to use 2.5G in London, in my experience 3G coverage is pretty unversal. Even in rural Shropshire I rarely need to use 2.5G. I was in the basement of a hotel, and the only Vodafone coverage in the room was 2.5G. From bitter experience I also know there wasn't any Vodafone 3G coverage in the departure lounges at my local airport. More recently I couldn't get any 3G, or 2.5G throughput, in a country pub a few miles from Derby. Is there no domestic "roaming" between carriers? No there isn't (apart from between the two carriers who recently merged: T-Mobile and Orange). 3 also roam onto Orange (2.5G) where they have no network coverage. AFAIK they don't roam onto Orange 3G or T-Mobile. Do they still do that - I had an idea they'd stopped because they were getting too big a bill from Orange for the 2.5G roamed data (which they'd sold to subscribers at a cheap flat rate). -- Roland Perry |
#814
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Roland Perry writes:
In message , at 20:21:10 on Sat, 10 Mar 2012, Phil remarked: As Brewers law states, the quality of the beer is inversely proportional to the price. Hmm, I don't think I've _ever_ lived in a place where that's true... It is almost always true, posh hotels very rarely sell proper beer, and if they do it use usually something bland and not very well kept. It is usually just lager and keg beer. Go to a local pub however and the beer will be proper, often local. And the cheaper beer in that local pub won't be as good as the more expensive beer. The only general rule is that "places with a high average price" might be serving worse beer, but even that is suspect. I went to a lovely rural pub for lunch a couple of weeks ago, and the beer was well kept and delicious. The only problem was they wanted £4/pint for it. A week later I was paying under £2 a pint in a City Centre pub, for beer that was pretty much the same quality (but certainly not noticeably better). I probably didn't do it very well, but the price of the beer was not what I meant. I was refering to the price of accomodation. In my experience business hotels, which accept amex, only serve lager and gas beer. Phil |
#815
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Roland Perry writes:
I was in the basement of a hotel, and the only Vodafone coverage in the room was 2.5G. From bitter experience I also know there wasn't any Vodafone 3G coverage in the departure lounges at my local airport. More recently I couldn't get any 3G, or 2.5G throughput, in a country pub a few miles from Derby. That is true, often 3G doesn't penetrate buildings very well. One of my local pubs is an example. T-mobile has rock solid 3G outside, but inside it falls back to Orange 2.5G. Is there no domestic "roaming" between carriers? No there isn't (apart from between the two carriers who recently merged: T-Mobile and Orange). 3 also roam onto Orange (2.5G) where they have no network coverage. AFAIK they don't roam onto Orange 3G or T-Mobile. Do they still do that - I had an idea they'd stopped because they were getting too big a bill from Orange for the 2.5G roamed data (which they'd sold to subscribers at a cheap flat rate). You could be right about roaming data on orange, AFAIK you can still use orange for voice calls and texts. I have been experimenting with a 3 SIM in my phone with a view to switching to their One Plan. The only place I lost 3G was in the same local pub, I was able to make a voice call and send/recieve texts. Was unable to use data however. Phil |
#816
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In message , at 20:51:58 on Sun, 11 Mar 2012,
Phil remarked: I have been experimenting with a 3 SIM in my phone with a view to switching to their One Plan. The first dongle I got was from 3, and I used to top it up monthly. But stopped using it when contention in Central London meant I was unable to make VoIP calls in the evening. (I wasn't just being cheap, this was for teleconferencing which combined VoIP and text-chat). Last year I returned to 3, with an annual top-up (now expired), and was very happy with the performance. But in the short term I still have some Vodafone credit to use up. -- Roland Perry |
#817
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In message , at 15:16:04 on Sat, 10 Mar
2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: On 10-Mar-12 04:43, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 18:04:27 on Fri, 9 Mar 2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: The existing "good reason" is that the mobile data terminals haven't been designed yet, They existed over a decade ago. Not that included the ticket-issuing printer, fares table etc. Receipt printers, yes. Fare tables? I'm not sure, but that's a relatively simple customization for what would presumably be a large order. There are hundreds of thousands of possible fares, multiplied by over a dozen different discount rates. The databases and algorithms "belong to" the train companies, and they are the sole customer for the equipment and have also decided that they don't need to buy it. let alone deployed. And the previous generation has at least 10 years life left in them. They were obsolete the day they were purchased; how long they're capable of meeting obsolete needs before turning into paperweights is not terribly relevant. It is, when there's no money to replace them, ... which is why savvy customers look at the ROI: you pay for capital assets with the cost savings from employing those assets. They don't see a cost saving, only a cost increase (all those mobile data bills). Even assuming they wanted to borrow the money to buy the new machines. The "slowness" of 2G/2.5G is mostly the connection delay while a separate data channel is set up, which takes several seconds, after which the data flows reasonably quickly. I use data on the move a lot. And was very disappointed on a recent trip to London when several times I could get a 2.5G signal, and "connect", but data was extremely slow (order of a few bytes per second). Even ancient 2G systems could do 9.6kbit/s, and 2.5G could do 56-115kbit/s (GPRS) or 237kbit/s (EDGE). For any of those to drop to "a few bytes per second" would require signal conditions so bad that the connection would fail. Whatever you are using to model the performance of such systems, it doesn't apply to those I've been using the last 12 years. The performance figures you quote are the maximum with no contention over the airwave or backhaul. Like the "2Mbit" or whatever that's promised for 3G, it's extremely rare to get connections of that speed, and it's relatively independent of the "number of bars" signal strength too. If there is no ROI, then customers won't buy it. And the customers (the train operators) aren't... as I've explained. Then either the vendor is doing a poor job of selling their product or that niche really doesn't need to be filled. Given how incompetent some vendors are, I wouldn't assume it's always the latter. You are promoting a classic "solution looking for a problem to solve", and there isn't one. There doesn't appear to be a problem with them being accepted today. Of course, it helps that for train tickets (and car park payment - another common non-online, and thus non-authorised, transaction) the "cost of sales" is virtually zero. The marginal cost of service (not cost of sales, which refers only to selling the ticket itself) may be close to zero, but unless you have spare capacity, there is an opportunity cost: the non-paying "customer" prevented a paying customer from using your service--and giving you money for it. Unless the train is so full no-one else can squeeze aboard, or the car park is completely full, the opportunity cost is zero. There is also opportunity cost in not accepting money from potential paying customers who only have a debit card. You can use cash as well. Although the chances of (eg) needing paid car parking and not having plastic is pretty small. Obviously, one would need some analysis to figure out if these costs were more or less than the cost of better terminals. If more, you buy; if not, you don't. And they aren't (buying). Also, since this is a gaping security hole just waiting to be exploited by the masses, Clearly it isn't. you would have to redo this analysis frequently--and the cost of doing that would need to be added to the costs above. You only need one analysis, then put each month's fraudulent transaction totals into the spreadsheet. It might end up being worth the upgrade just to not have to do the analysis--or to avoid the risk of making the papers when a few million teens figure out they can easily beat your system and ride all over the country for free without getting caught. All it takes these days is one Facebook post that goes viral. They would ride for free (avoid stations with barriers, and trains with ticket inspectors) rather than have their credit rating trashed the first time they tried this on (their account going into an unauthorised overdraft that they then walk away from). the regulators have been steadily reducing the cost of roaming. Our regulators don't care since _customers_ don't pay for roaming; that's a problem for the carriers to hash out between themselves. Really, so I can get a refund for that $1/minute I was charged when roaming in the USA last year? My own choice of voice carrier (Virgin) was made because their International Roaming was about half the price of others. That's just not a consideration here for several reasons, some good and some bad. So if you went on holiday to France, the cost of calling would be the same irrespective of which network you were with? OTOH, I do remember the days of paying roaming charges on my 1G phone even a few miles from home. I remember the stories, like people being charged vast roaming fees to call from (eg) Minneapolis to St Paul. -- Roland Perry |
#818
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In message , at 21:58:02 on Sat, 10 Mar
2012, David Lesher remarked: I wonder how many retail businesses accept only plastic ? It's quite difficult to buy airline tickets with cash (notwithstanding the alarms bells that would ring at Homeland Security). Buy the airline "gift cards" at the supermarket.... Do keep up. In the UK they are not part of the "credit/debit card" space. -- Roland Perry |
#819
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On Mon, 12 Mar 2012 10:18:34 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: much snipped Our regulators don't care since _customers_ don't pay for roaming; that's a problem for the carriers to hash out between themselves. Really, so I can get a refund for that $1/minute I was charged when roaming in the USA last year? My own choice of voice carrier (Virgin) was made because their International Roaming was about half the price of others. That's just not a consideration here for several reasons, some good and some bad. So if you went on holiday to France, the cost of calling would be the same irrespective of which network you were with? OTOH, I do remember the days of paying roaming charges on my 1G phone even a few miles from home. I remember the stories, like people being charged vast roaming fees to call from (eg) Minneapolis to St Paul. If you have an out of country phone in either Canada or the United States, the roaming costs to go to the other country are noticeable. I'm going to pay 40 dollars of 100 minutes of air time in the US for one month so that I don't get hit with really bad roaming charges. Within either the US or Canada, most carriers are nationwide so far as roaming is concerned. Clark Morris |
#820
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On 12-Mar-12 05:18, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 15:16:04 on Sat, 10 Mar 2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: On 10-Mar-12 04:43, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 18:04:27 on Fri, 9 Mar 2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: The existing "good reason" is that the mobile data terminals haven't been designed yet, They existed over a decade ago. Not that included the ticket-issuing printer, fares table etc. Receipt printers, yes. Fare tables? I'm not sure, but that's a relatively simple customization for what would presumably be a large order. There are hundreds of thousands of possible fares, multiplied by over a dozen different discount rates. The databases and algorithms "belong to" the train companies, and they are the sole customer for the equipment and have also decided that they don't need to buy it. They've obviously given all that information to the companies that make their current terminals, so what would be different about telling _those same companies_ to do the same for terminals with mobile data capability? let alone deployed. And the previous generation has at least 10 years life left in them. They were obsolete the day they were purchased; how long they're capable of meeting obsolete needs before turning into paperweights is not terribly relevant. It is, when there's no money to replace them, ... which is why savvy customers look at the ROI: you pay for capital assets with the cost savings from employing those assets. They don't see a cost saving, only a cost increase (all those mobile data bills). We can debate _how large_ the cost saving will be, and therefore whether it is worth solving, but it is not zero. Even assuming they wanted to borrow the money to buy the new machines. Whether they need to borrow money depends on their cash management strategy and does not affect the ROI calculation; either way, the ROI on capital programs must exceed the Cost of Capital. If there is no ROI, then customers won't buy it. And the customers (the train operators) aren't... as I've explained. Then either the vendor is doing a poor job of selling their product or that niche really doesn't need to be filled. Given how incompetent some vendors are, I wouldn't assume it's always the latter. You are promoting a classic "solution looking for a problem to solve", and there isn't one. I clearly identified the problem to be solved and was told there was no solution; now that I identify the solution, you claim there is no problem? There doesn't appear to be a problem with them being accepted today. Of course, it helps that for train tickets (and car park payment - another common non-online, and thus non-authorised, transaction) the "cost of sales" is virtually zero. The marginal cost of service (not cost of sales, which refers only to selling the ticket itself) may be close to zero, but unless you have spare capacity, there is an opportunity cost: the non-paying "customer" prevented a paying customer from using your service--and giving you money for it. Unless the train is so full no-one else can squeeze aboard, or the car park is completely full, the opportunity cost is zero. Opportunity costs are _never_ zero. They may be small, perhaps not worth worrying about, but once dismissed such costs have a nasty tendency to grow and surprise you later. There is also opportunity cost in not accepting money from potential paying customers who only have a debit card. You can use cash as well. Although the chances of (eg) needing paid car parking and not having plastic is pretty small. And if someone has only a debit card and no cash, you're going to throw them off the train? What is the cost of doing that--particularly the cost in PR? Obviously, one would need some analysis to figure out if these costs were more or less than the cost of better terminals. If more, you buy; if not, you don't. And they aren't (buying). Lots of folks don't buy things that will save them money because they either haven't done the analysis or don't think they have the money--but one of the reasons they "don't have" the money is that they're not adopting cost-saving technologies and processes, so it's a vicious cycle. Also, since this is a gaping security hole just waiting to be exploited by the masses, Clearly it isn't. There is no debate he offline credit/debit payments _are_ insecure. (Digital cash systems can be made secure, but that's not what we're talking about here--and it's shockingly difficult, even in theory.) It might end up being worth the upgrade just to not have to do the analysis--or to avoid the risk of making the papers when a few million teens figure out they can easily beat your system and ride all over the country for free without getting caught. All it takes these days is one Facebook post that goes viral. They would ride for free (avoid stations with barriers, and trains with ticket inspectors) rather than have their credit rating trashed the first time they tried this on (their account going into an unauthorised overdraft that they then walk away from). Someone (you, I think) said that the current terminals accept _any_ credit card presented. That means I can just print up my own cards with random numbers and ride for free--and the carrier doesn't know until the terminal uploads the card information later, long after I'm off the train. Using _my_ credit/debit card for such a fraud would be silly. the regulators have been steadily reducing the cost of roaming. Our regulators don't care since _customers_ don't pay for roaming; that's a problem for the carriers to hash out between themselves. Really, so I can get a refund for that $1/minute I was charged when roaming in the USA last year? I think some context got snipped: US customers do not pay for domestic roaming. You were neither a US customer nor doing domestic roaming; what you pay is up to your non-US carrier, and US regulators obviously have no power over that anyway. My own choice of voice carrier (Virgin) was made because their International Roaming was about half the price of others. That's just not a consideration here for several reasons, some good and some bad. So if you went on holiday to France, the cost of calling would be the same irrespective of which network you were with? No, because that's not domestic roaming. However, ~77% of Americans don't even have a passport, and only a tiny fraction of those who do actually travel abroad in any given year--especially if you exclude Canada, which is in many respects treated like the 51st state. OTOH, I do remember the days of paying roaming charges on my 1G phone even a few miles from home. I remember the stories, like people being charged vast roaming fees to call from (eg) Minneapolis to St Paul. The other end of the call had no effect on roaming charges; what mattered was the "service area" you subscribed to and from which carrier. So, if you lived in NYC, traveled to Chicago and made a call to a "local" number, you would be charged roaming fees for being out of your service area plus the LD fees from NYC to Chicago. Worse, because coverage was so bad, it's entirely possible that said NYC customer would end up paying roaming charges _even in NYC_ because their phone couldn't find towers from the correct carrier. Worse again, when making a call while moving, if _any_ tower used was via roaming, the entire call would be charged at roaming rates, even if 99% of the call was on the correct carrier's towers. All of that nonsense went away with 2G, where "national" plans (i.e. no domestic roaming and "free" long distance) became the norm. "Local" plans similar to the 1G model were slightly cheaper, but not enough for most people to bother--and often ended up more expensive in the end. S -- Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking |
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