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#51
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On Wed, Jan 01, 2014 at 10:02:14PM +0000, Paul Corfield wrote:
I recognise that the queues might be at ticket machines instead but it's not the same thing. Thornton Heath, this morning, had a looooong queue almost out of the door of people trying to do Oystery things. I just walked straight to the ticket office and bought my monthly travelcard, no queue at all. So, for today only, I welcome the Oyster PTB not giving a **** about those of us in south London and not bothering to properly supply all the facilities necessary for Oyster to be worth using :-) -- David Cantrell | even more awesome than a panda-fur coat There are two kinds of security, the one that keeps your sister out, the one that keeps the government out and the one that keeps Bruce Schneier out. |
#52
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On Fri, Jan 03, 2014 at 12:21:20PM +0000, Roland Perry wrote:
That's a great shame as it reduces the plastic-card-bloat in my wallet. Also a slap in the face for early adopters. Not really. You, like loads of other early adopters, just guessed the technological direction incorrectly. Early adopters of any technology really have to expect this to happen occasionally, and stop whining about it. -- David Cantrell | Minister for Arbitrary Justice PLEASE NOTE: This message was meant to offend everyone equally, regardless of race, creed, sexual orientation, politics, choice of beer, operating system, mode of transport, or their editor. |
#53
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On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 09:45:59AM +0100, tim...... wrote:
wrote in message ... I wonder if TfL would eventually do away with and accept either thumb prints or have ceiling mounted readers that can read your face or irises. Fares would be directly deducted from people's accounts. I can just see the DM headlines now How dare those blind hook-handed cripples dodge their fares? -- David Cantrell | Official London Perl Mongers Bad Influence In Victorian times, when every man wore a beard the size of a yew, Britain ruled the world. In the early 20th century, when the beard was trimmed to a moustache, we scraped through two world wars but lost an empire. Today, when Mach3 Turbo multi-blades are the norm, our national pride derives largely from beating the Swedes at Olympic cycling. Grow a beard. Your country needs you. |
#54
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On Thu, Jan 02, 2014 at 08:46:47PM +0000, Clive Page wrote:
It could be that some of them are conditioned by the near impossibility of using ticket machines at stations in France (and for that matter in the Netherlands) if you are a non-native. The only problem I've had with ticket machines in Paris is that they use funny foreign coins that I don't recognise very quickly, which makes it hard to figure out what to put in. If only Europe would adopt a single currency, such as the pound. -- David Cantrell | Godless Liberal Elitist |
#56
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![]() "David Cantrell" wrote in message ... On Fri, Jan 03, 2014 at 12:21:20PM +0000, Roland Perry wrote: That's a great shame as it reduces the plastic-card-bloat in my wallet. Also a slap in the face for early adopters. Not really. You, like loads of other early adopters, just guessed the technological direction incorrectly. Early adopters of any technology really have to expect this to happen occasionally, and stop whining about it. though for most early adopters, it happens more than occasionally! tim |
#57
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![]() "David Cantrell" wrote in message ... On Thu, Jan 02, 2014 at 08:46:47PM +0000, Clive Page wrote: It could be that some of them are conditioned by the near impossibility of using ticket machines at stations in France (and for that matter in the Netherlands) if you are a non-native. The only problem I've had with ticket machines in Paris is that they use funny foreign coins that I don't recognise very quickly, which makes it hard to figure out what to put in. If only Europe would adopt a single currency, such as the pound. I've been using the Euro, day in day out, for 50% of the time since the day they were minted, and I still can't tell what value a random small coin is, without reading the value on it. And for those that don't know, they have different patterns on the edge so that you can tell then apart but I'm ******* if I can remember which value has which edging. (and before anyone mentions it, yes I can tell the copper from the bronze, it differentiating within those sets that I can't do) tim -- David Cantrell | Godless Liberal Elitist |
#58
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" writes:
On 02/01/2014 21:11, Mizter T wrote: On 02/01/2014 20:46, Clive Page wrote: On 02/01/2014 16:24, tim...... wrote: If TfL are expecting your average foreign tourist to start paying for tickets using "pay wave" credit cards I think that they are tilting at windmills I walk from St.Pancras to King's Cross tube station quite frequently and continue to be surprised at the number of arrivals from Eurostar who head straight to the enormously long queue for the ticket office, when there are plenty of ticket machines with no queue or only a small one. It could be that some of them are conditioned by the near impossibility of using ticket machines at stations in France (and for that matter in the Netherlands) if you are a non-native. I find that surprising as I would assume that TVMs in both countries would be multi-lingual. Indeed, I always prefer using TVMs, as compared to standing in queue -- it's quicker, you don't have to deal with surly staff and you don't have to put up with the next person in front of you in queue with a large or confusing transaction or some other issue. Annoying that (all?) the RER and Metro ticket machines don't take notes, but they should accept UK cards these days (there used to be problems when the French had their own chip-and-PIN system, before the adoption of the EMV standard.) Problem with using a UK debit card abroad is that the bank takes a percentage on each transaction. At least that is the way it is with my bank. It depends on your account, more than the bank. My HSBC Advance account gives me free foreign currency transactions. Admittedly there is a fee, but as it gives me worldwide travel insurance and UK breakdown cover I consider it value for money. Phil |
#59
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"Michael R N Dolbear" writes:
"Neil Williams" wrote I don't see the few seconds saved as of any significance. It might be of some benefit when a whole host of people were buying the same thing and nothing else. It is about volume - shop in ALDI and see how fast their checkout operators are and you will see why it is significant. They waste a few seconds by being slow to press the "customer does not require cashback" key so I think they are much the same as other supermarkets though fewer coupons and car park tickets, and no loyalty cards do help. Contactless does save time at other checkouts by elliminating the do you want cashback question, the transaction has gone through in about the time it normally takes to plug the card into the machine. Then normally the machine decides if the card is a debit or credit card, then the cashier asks if you want cashback and then they press a button to allow you to enter your pin. Contactless is also much easier on the M6 toll, much less chance of dropping the card. Phil |
#60
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Clive Page writes:
On 04/01/2014 01:01, Michael R N Dolbear wrote: "Phil" wrote But you see the same everywhere, how few use pay-at-pump, although self-service checkouts do seem to have gained acceptance. Today's news gave a new reason for this http://www.theguardian.com/business/...-petrol-glitch But that's probably not the only reason. I like to get a paper record for every credit card transaction, so I can check my bill every month. I used to use the "pay at pump" machines routinely but stopped after twice finding at the end that the machine could not produce a receipt. If the machine had been programmed properly to tell me this at the outset that it was out of paper I could have avoided the pump payment option. It often doesn't take much longer to pay at the kiosk, and for me it's worth the extra few seconds to be sure that I get a paper record of every transaction. At Tesco/Shell/Morrisons, just go to another pump and press 'Reprint my reciept', insert your card and you will get the receipt. Phil |
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