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#821
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On Mar 9, 2:34*am, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
Note that overdraft (at least in the US) is _not_ guaranteed; the bank can refuse to honor any debit against insufficient funds at their whim--but they generally will, since it allows them to charge the customer massive fees on top of the debit itself. FWIW, in the old days, banks would occassionally honor a slight overdraft by good customers without charge or fee. One common tactic is charging fees for anything and everything, but willing to waive them if the customer calls up to request it. The banks and other businesses know most people are too busy today to (a) scruintize their statements carefully and (b) call up and go through the phone mail jail to get a knowledgeable human. But one bank pushed it too far and went out of business. Technology products are typically amortized over 3-5 years. *20 years? You're way, way behind the curve in both costs and capabilities, to the point it's almost certainly costing your business more (in both lost revenue and higher operating costs) than buying replacements would cost. Amortization time is often based on tax issues rather than the actual expected life of the equipment. Many companies seek to amortize as fast as possible in order to get the biggest expense tax reduction from the depreciation charge. Cash for replacement is a separate issue and planned for separately. OTOH, lots of folks didn't understand this until the 1980s or even 1990s; they had amortized tech on a 10 or 20 year cycle like they would for heavy machinery--and then got burned when they needed to upgrade and couldn't because they were still paying for equipment that was only fit to be used as paperweights. A normal company will replace equipment when it is economically desirable to do so regardless of its past amortization. If they do so early they 'write down' the asset as a special charge. A company with weak fiances may 'make do' with old equipment if it is still viable, but again, it depends on various factors on what work is actually being performed. Lifespan of "technology" units (or heavy machinery) varies greatly depending on many factors. Speaking as an employee of a tech products vendor, customers are now demanding full ROI in 12-18 months, which gives them immediate cost savings even on a 36-month depreciation schedule. *"Disruptive" new technologies can have an ROI of 6-9 months. *Nobody sane wants to have to wait 5+ years to adopt new technology--unless they're a monopoly and therefore don't have to worry about competitors adopting it first. Being the "first on the block" to adopt new technology is highly risky. New technology needs time to get the physical, software, and workplace bugs ironed out. New for "newness sake", so avidly pushed by techies over recent years is not always a prudent approach. Some company owners have an ego thing to show off how their business has the latest and greatest. That might be good for the vendors, but lousy for the business. I remember in the early days when newcomers were producing PBX switches how many customers suddenly found themselves without phone service because certain functions--once taken from granted because Ma Bell did them--no longer worked. Others had so many features that no one needed or could understand how to use that using the phones became a nightmare, not an improvement. A big retailer cut over to price tag scanning too early. As a result, checkout lines became horrid and people simply abandoned their purchases and walked out. That business took a huge beating thanks to "new technology". Returning to railroads, the PRR once always prototyped new technology in a small order to get the bugs out before a large order. That research was a reason the GG-1 was such a huge success. Unfortunately, when they ordered the Metroliner MUs, they rushed the purchase before testing and it took years to debug the cars. (In contrast, they carefully researched the Budd Silverliners, and the production models lasted in service for 49 years.) |
#822
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In message , at 12:59:18 on
Mon, 12 Mar 2012, Clark F Morris remarked: 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. Is that a special tariff that allows cheaper overseas roaming if you pay so much for domestic airtime? In the UK, a typical plan will be 200 domestic minutes and virtually unlimited texts, and virtually unlimited calls to the same mobile network - for about $20. Within either the US or Canada, most carriers are nationwide so far as roaming is concerned. I'm getting that message. Understood! -- Roland Perry |
#823
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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. Here in Victoria, if you are down by the waterfront, you may get hit by roaming changes for even a local call. Why? Because your call gets picked up by a cell tower in Blaine, Washington State. :-) -- Cheers. Roger Traviss Photos of the late HO scale GER: - http://www.greateasternrailway.com For more photos not in the above album and kitbashes etc..:- http://s94.photobucket.com/albums/l9...Great_Eastern/ |
#824
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#825
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On Mon, 12 Mar 2012 17:57:49 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 12:59:18 on Mon, 12 Mar 2012, Clark F Morris remarked: 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. Is that a special tariff that allows cheaper overseas roaming if you pay so much for domestic airtime? What I meant was I purchased 100 US airtime minutes for my Canadian phone. Text messages in the US will cost me 75 cents a message unless I spend 10 dollars to cut the cost to 25 cents a message. Clark Morris In the UK, a typical plan will be 200 domestic minutes and virtually unlimited texts, and virtually unlimited calls to the same mobile network - for about $20. Within either the US or Canada, most carriers are nationwide so far as roaming is concerned. I'm getting that message. Understood! |
#826
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On Feb 24, 4:17*am, "Roger Traviss"
wrote: My newest debit card, arrived yesterday, lets me use it like a credit card for on-line purchases and like a credit card when travelling outside Canada, although it still debits my bank account. I've got two like that, though in the US I have to draw money by selecting 'checking account' & in Germany 'current account |
#827
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On Mon, 12 Mar 2012 11:08:51 -0700, "Roger Traviss"
wrote: 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. Here in Victoria, if you are down by the waterfront, you may get hit by roaming changes for even a local call. Why? Because your call gets picked up by a cell tower in Blaine, Washington State. :-) That has been alleged to have happened on English south coast shores/beaches which are screened from the local transmitter by high cliffs but within range of French base stations. |
#828
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![]() "Charles Ellson" wrote That has been alleged to have happened on English south coast shores/beaches which are screened from the local transmitter by high cliffs but within range of French base stations. Certainly has happened at St Margarets Bay (on the coast between Dover and Deal - Ian Fleming used to live there). Eurotunnel are equipping the tunnel for mobile phone reception, The South running tunnel will be connected to French networks, and the North running tunnel to British networks. So passengers will (normally) be connected to their home network on the outward journey, but face roaming charges on the return, with complications in case of Single Line Working. http://www.eurotunnelgroup.com/uploa...nnelTunnel.pdf Peter |
#829
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In message , at 04:55:58 on
Tue, 13 Mar 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: Here in Victoria, if you are down by the waterfront, you may get hit by roaming changes for even a local call. Why? Because your call gets picked up by a cell tower in Blaine, Washington State. :-) That has been alleged to have happened on English south coast shores/beaches which are screened from the local transmitter by high cliffs but within range of French base stations. I've had that happen to me near Dover, but I didn't make any calls! -- Roland Perry |
#830
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In message , at 11:46:39 on Mon, 12 Mar
2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: 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? Nothing different, it's just that they would need to place an order with that company, and as far as I can see they have no intention of doing so. So having the data doesn't help much. 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. Indeed, and I'm saying the saving might well be less than zero (ie a greater cost). The recent introduction of card-based terminals to pay for refreshments on board the trains I catch to London has been scrapped, and they went back to accepting cash only, citing the cost of operating (including leasing, probably) the terminals. 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? The problem you identified exists, but is not serious enough that it needs a solution. 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's even a possibility that opportunity costs are less than zero. People dislike travelling on crowded trains, and the availability of a few "spare" seats is a benefit. The existence of "First Class" fares, which on many routes provide little more than a guarantee of a seat, are proof of this. 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? There's never been a question of not-accepting debit cards. Some now deprecated *versions* of debit cards are not accepted, but this is well known and anyone boarding a train with no means to pay (in most cases having deliberately not bought a ticket beforehand) isn't going to score any points with the public. 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. That may apply to some situations, but not this one. It's a sledgehammer to crack a nut. 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. They are secure (in as much as anything can be - one day someone will rob Fort Knox), but there's a very small risk of the payment being "bounced" if the cardholder has no funds. (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 No, because you'd have to make a Chip (for the C&P) that validated correctly. So far, there's been no reported incidence of someone being able to counterfeit the chips (and I'm quite sure a lot of people have been trying for years). If you don't understand that very basic parameter, no wonder the rest of your posting doesn't make sense to us in the UK --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. So it has to be a stolen one, where you know the PIN. 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. s/_customers_/_domestic_customers_/ makes it clearer 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. Indeed, and I should have made it clear that in my example it was implied that someone's "service area" would only have been one of the twin cities, and not both. With predictable consequences when they picked up a tower in the wrong one. -- Roland Perry |
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