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#71
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On 04/12/2015 14:51, Roland Perry wrote:
2015, Clive Page remarked: I thought that when contactless bank cards were introduced for small transactions in shops one of the safeguards was that the first time you used one you would be required to enter your pin on the associated pin pad, just so that if someone stole your card and you had not enabled it in this way it could not be used to empty your account. I dimly recall that too, but have never encountered it myself in the field (I have several cards on the go). I've just got more information on this, by chance. Halifax says of a conctact-less card that "the first time you use it for any transaction you will need to enter your PIN. Once you've done that your card is ready for contact-less payments." And I just checked the website of Nationwide Building Society which has different and rather ambiguous wording but to much the same effect - except that they say the initial transaction can be a chip and signature one. So it doesn't appear that there is any flag on the card that has to be updated by using it with a PIN the first time, the flag (if any) must be on the bank's own servers. Nor does it appear that you need to use it with a potentially contact-less terminal but with a PIN first time, provided you have used that card somewhere with a PIN beforehand, even an ATM. This makes me more worried than I was - it means that any of my contact-less cards could be stolen and used for a whole string of transactions under £30 by anyone else with no PIN. I wonder how I would establish that I didn't make these purchases myself. Rather bizarrely, the Nationwide site says "For extra security, you might occasionally be asked to enter your 4-digit PIN, or sign." This is just after pointing out that you can use them for travel on London Transport in place of an Oyster card. I'll bet a bus or tube gate-line never asks for your PIN. -- Clive Page |
#72
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On 09/12/2015 17:09, Offramp wrote:
A great thing about the internet is that someone asks a question like, "Is it no longer possible to buy a single bus ticket?" and he gets nearly one HUNDRED replies! Superb! And most of them don't attempt to answer the question. -- Clive Page |
#74
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![]() wrote in message ... In article , (tim.....) wrote: wrote in message ... In article , (Roland Perry) wrote: In message , at 19:27:10 on Tue, 8 Dec 2015, Mizter T remarked: And presumably these courier services would install pillar boxes with once or twice daily collections in almost every urban street the country They are much more sparse than that. On average perhaps one every ten minutes walk. The one nearest me has only a single collection each day, at about 8.30am! Five mins walk, perhaps, in an urban setting. From my front door, I've got four that I can think of well within 5 mins walk. YMMV in an urban setting outside the M25. This urban setting outside the M25 still has evening box collections with more than 4 within 5 minutes walk of our house. presumably that's because you have 4 post offices within 5 minutes walk not many people are this lucky Not more than two post offices within that number. The nearest is within 100m of the front door while the 4 don't include the nearest post office, where any posting has to be handed over the counter as it has no box close by. You're lucky to have post boxes still collected in the evening Round my way the only ones that get that are the ones outside the post office, all the rest get opened at about 8:30 as postie walks past on his delivery A change they made about 2 years ago tim |
#75
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In article ,
(tim.....) wrote: wrote in message ... In article , (tim.....) wrote: wrote in message ... In article , (Roland Perry) wrote: In message , at 19:27:10 on Tue, 8 Dec 2015, Mizter T remarked: And presumably these courier services would install pillar boxes with once or twice daily collections in almost every urban street the country They are much more sparse than that. On average perhaps one every ten minutes walk. The one nearest me has only a single collection each day, at about 8.30am! Five mins walk, perhaps, in an urban setting. From my front door, I've got four that I can think of well within 5 mins walk. YMMV in an urban setting outside the M25. This urban setting outside the M25 still has evening box collections with more than 4 within 5 minutes walk of our house. presumably that's because you have 4 post offices within 5 minutes walk not many people are this lucky Not more than two post offices within that number. The nearest is within 100m of the front door while the 4 don't include the nearest post office, where any posting has to be handed over the counter as it has no box close by. You're lucky to have post boxes still collected in the evening Round my way the only ones that get that are the ones outside the post office, all the rest get opened at about 8:30 as postie walks past on his delivery A change they made about 2 years ago I know. Another reason why I like living in a city centre. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#76
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In uk.transport.london message MIOdnaaWOsLD3vXLnZ2dnUU78dOdnZ2d@giganew
s.com, Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:06:06, posted: This urban setting outside the M25 still has evening box collections with more than 4 within 5 minutes walk of our house. If you still live in the same place, your 5-minute-area surely has one of the highest concentrations of letter-writers in the UK. It may be that so many are provided there not for the convenience of perambulating posters as such but to save the poor post-collectors having to extract envelopefuls from boxes crammed to bursting-point with erudite epistles. -- (c) John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v6.05 MIME. Merlyn Web Site - FAQish topics, acronyms, & links. |
#77
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In article id,
lid (Dr J R Stockton) wrote: In uk.transport.london message , Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:06:06, posted: This urban setting outside the M25 still has evening box collections with more than 4 within 5 minutes walk of our house. If you still live in the same place, your 5-minute-area surely has one of the highest concentrations of letter-writers in the UK. It may be that so many are provided there not for the convenience of perambulating posters as such but to save the poor post-collectors having to extract envelopefuls from boxes crammed to bursting-point with erudite epistles. You might think that. I couldn't possibly comment. But I think most of the boxes are positioned where they are for historical reasons. The closest one used to be close to the sub-post office until it closed over 30 years ago. When another one opened about 5 years ago at the other end of the street they didn't put one outside it. Another is at the main post office which has moved twice in recent decades and wasn't within 5 minutes' walk at one time. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
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