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#22
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In message , at 11:52:08 on Tue, 11 Aug
2020, Graeme Wall remarked: When did you last see a copper coin? Does copper-plated count? [As it happens, I have a piggy bank full of solid copper coins, so the literal answer is "today"] -- Roland Perry |
#23
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On 11/08/2020 13:46, Scott wrote:
On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 10:24:40 +0100, Graeme Wall wrote: On 11/08/2020 08:48, wrote: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 18:39:31 +0100 Arthur Figgis wrote: On 10/08/2020 10:22, wrote: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 10:02:08 +0100 MikeS wrote: On 10/08/2020 08:40, wrote: I took the tube for the first time in months yesterday and it seems you can no longer update your oyster card with cash. I asked one of the staff about this apparently "temporary" measure and he said he doubts the facility will ever come back and I tend to believe him. So thats another avenue of anonymity out the window. How long before Oyster cards themselves are consigned to history and we have to use a bank card everywhere so we can be nicely tracked not only by TfL but by the banks too? TfL's website lists 69 tube stations which it says still accept cash, plus DLR and Overground. Oyster cards can be bought and topped up at newsagents and other shops all over the TfL area. I doubt they all refuse cash either. Common sense says that the OP cannot be correct because it would be impossible for anyone without a bank account to use London's buses. Plenty of shops and cafes are not accepting cash or making it very difficult to pay with it by making self serve machines card only and having to queue for the single assistant at the till, so what makes you think TfL give a damn? Because TfL are required by the politicians to give a damn, and consider the edge cases and goat herders. It was politicians (I'm not sure whether it was Sadiq Squirt or Number 10) that told them to stop accepting cash in imost of their stations in the first place according to the member of staff I spoke to. Cash is a known vector in the transmission of various diseases. At least notes can be washed nowadays through the process known as money-laundering. Would 60 degrees be sufficient :-) We could start a whole thread on "which degree to do". |
#24
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On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 13:11:57 +0100
Graeme Wall wrote: On 11/08/2020 12:43, wrote: When did you last see a copper coin? Last time I handled a 2p piece which was only recently. And before you turn your pedant mode to up 11 I know its copper plated but the germs don't know that. How many TfL ticket machines still accept 2p pieces? From straw man to non sequitor. I can't wait to see what technique you're going to employ next. |
#25
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#26
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On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 15:10:58 +0000 (UTC), wrote:
On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 13:11:57 +0100 Graeme Wall wrote: On 11/08/2020 12:43, wrote: When did you last see a copper coin? Last time I handled a 2p piece which was only recently. And before you turn your pedant mode to up 11 I know its copper plated but the germs don't know that. How many TfL ticket machines still accept 2p pieces? From straw man to non sequitor. I can't wait to see what technique you're going to employ next. Non sequitur surely, if you want to be pedantic. |
#27
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On 11/08/2020 16:10, wrote:
On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 13:11:57 +0100 Graeme Wall wrote: On 11/08/2020 12:43, wrote: When did you last see a copper coin? Last time I handled a 2p piece which was only recently. And before you turn your pedant mode to up 11 I know its copper plated but the germs don't know that. How many TfL ticket machines still accept 2p pieces? From straw man to non sequitor. I can't wait to see what technique you're going to employ next. Oh dear, we are back to our junior school days are we? -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#28
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:03:44 on Tue, 11 Aug 2020, Scott remarked: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 08:58:30 +0000 (UTC), wrote: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 09:04:09 +0100 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 07:40:56 on Mon, 10 Aug 2020, remarked: I took the tube for the first time in months yesterday and it seems you can no longer update your oyster card with cash. Is that a subset of the TVMs perhaps not accepting cash for *any* transaction? No idea. I asked one of the staff about this apparently "temporary" measure and he said he doubts the facility will ever come back and I tend to believe him. So thats another avenue of anonymity out the window. Get yourself a pre-pay credit card, for example from a bureau -de-change. That'll break the chain of traceability unless you are a suspected terrorist on the run. I'm not fussed enough, but thats not the point. Why is the cash option being dropped? Any covid excuses are BS since the staff never need to physically touch it, they just empty the bucket into something Securicor (or whoever) take away. A trader I knew said that once handling costs and pay-in charges are taken into account, cash is more expensive to process than a debit card. It depends a lot on what sector the business is in. For example, traditionally the card companies gave petrol stations very low commission rates, because it accustomed the public to using cards. If you are in the pub trade and need to pay your wholesale grocer in cash when they deliver every morning (because your trade-credit rating is pants), it might well make sense not to discourage cash. One pub I used to frequent a decade ago, used to put the notes they took into the cash machine in the pub to save having to pay it in to the bank (the "pub staff do not have access to this machine" sign was a total lie). I wonder how many of the notes just circulated from one side of the room to the other and back for months on end...! Anna Noyd-Dryver |
#29
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On 11/08/2020 20:41, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote:
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 10:03:44 on Tue, 11 Aug 2020, Scott remarked: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 08:58:30 +0000 (UTC), wrote: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 09:04:09 +0100 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 07:40:56 on Mon, 10 Aug 2020, remarked: I took the tube for the first time in months yesterday and it seems you can no longer update your oyster card with cash. Is that a subset of the TVMs perhaps not accepting cash for *any* transaction? No idea. I asked one of the staff about this apparently "temporary" measure and he said he doubts the facility will ever come back and I tend to believe him. So thats another avenue of anonymity out the window. Get yourself a pre-pay credit card, for example from a bureau -de-change. That'll break the chain of traceability unless you are a suspected terrorist on the run. I'm not fussed enough, but thats not the point. Why is the cash option being dropped? Any covid excuses are BS since the staff never need to physically touch it, they just empty the bucket into something Securicor (or whoever) take away. A trader I knew said that once handling costs and pay-in charges are taken into account, cash is more expensive to process than a debit card. It depends a lot on what sector the business is in. For example, traditionally the card companies gave petrol stations very low commission rates, because it accustomed the public to using cards. If you are in the pub trade and need to pay your wholesale grocer in cash when they deliver every morning (because your trade-credit rating is pants), it might well make sense not to discourage cash. One pub I used to frequent a decade ago, used to put the notes they took into the cash machine in the pub to save having to pay it in to the bank (the "pub staff do not have access to this machine" sign was a total lie). I wonder how many of the notes just circulated from one side of the room to the other and back for months on end...! That, plus their share of he commission, was the reason that the machines were so popular in pubs for a while. Also places like petrol stations and various other small businesses. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#30
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Graeme Wall wrote:
On 11/08/2020 20:41, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 10:03:44 on Tue, 11 Aug 2020, Scott remarked: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 08:58:30 +0000 (UTC), wrote: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 09:04:09 +0100 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 07:40:56 on Mon, 10 Aug 2020, remarked: I took the tube for the first time in months yesterday and it seems you can no longer update your oyster card with cash. Is that a subset of the TVMs perhaps not accepting cash for *any* transaction? No idea. I asked one of the staff about this apparently "temporary" measure and he said he doubts the facility will ever come back and I tend to believe him. So thats another avenue of anonymity out the window. Get yourself a pre-pay credit card, for example from a bureau -de-change. That'll break the chain of traceability unless you are a suspected terrorist on the run. I'm not fussed enough, but thats not the point. Why is the cash option being dropped? Any covid excuses are BS since the staff never need to physically touch it, they just empty the bucket into something Securicor (or whoever) take away. A trader I knew said that once handling costs and pay-in charges are taken into account, cash is more expensive to process than a debit card. It depends a lot on what sector the business is in. For example, traditionally the card companies gave petrol stations very low commission rates, because it accustomed the public to using cards. If you are in the pub trade and need to pay your wholesale grocer in cash when they deliver every morning (because your trade-credit rating is pants), it might well make sense not to discourage cash. One pub I used to frequent a decade ago, used to put the notes they took into the cash machine in the pub to save having to pay it in to the bank (the "pub staff do not have access to this machine" sign was a total lie). I wonder how many of the notes just circulated from one side of the room to the other and back for months on end...! That, plus their share of he commission, was the reason that the machines were so popular in pubs for a while. Also places like petrol stations and various other small businesses. "No we don't take cards, but there's a cash machine just there". A couple of years ago I used one in a shop in the IoW which made the classic dial-up-modem sound while it was saying "authorising" on the screen!! Anna Noyd-Dryver |
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