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#272
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On Sun, 9 Oct 2005 12:15:53 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)"
wrote: "Nick Cooper" wrote in message ... Purely subjective. My subjective view is that the vast majority of people I know take one or two separate weeks off, Isn't this what I have been saying? Your original contention was: (a) a two-week block at Christmas; and (b) a two-week block at some other point in the year; and (c) nothing else. -- James Farrar . @gmail.com |
#273
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On Sun, 9 Oct 2005 12:15:53 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)"
wrote: "Nick Cooper" wrote in message ... On Sat, 8 Oct 2005 18:40:26 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)" wrote: This is exactly right. I did not say they had to use 10 days leave, but that they had a period of 2 weeks when the did not go to work. Even the maximum of 10 is not "2 weeks." Most years it's only 8 days - i.e. one week and one day - as it is this year. I accept that you live in a world where people have to work over the Xmas period. But I work in a world where the company shuts down for the whole period, sometimes for a full two weeks. This has happend at every company that I have worked at in the last 25 years (I freelance and average about one company per year). I'm not doubting that. I'm doubting you using that as the basis to claim that's what happens to "most people," i.e. the majority of the population. However, hardly anyone I know gets that. FWIW It's bloody annoying and I hate having to waste my holiday days in this way, so I don't see it as getting a benefit. It is my contention that more people work in my world than in yours. Clearly your world doesn't include the public, retail or service sectors. Add to that a sizable chunk of other industries, and you'd be hard-pressed to claim a majority. No-one is sensibly going to buy a monthly season on the 4th of December as they will not be using it from 25th to the 1st You mean "... _if_ they will not be using it from 25th to the 1st." Well obviously. If you're nitpicking about this what else have you nitpicked about? It's not nitpicking to point out a huge and fundamental flaw in your "argument." (and in many cases longer). You keep claiming this; I - and a number of other posters, it seems - dispute it. And most people take 2 (or more) weeks holiday in the summer/easter when the kids are off school. It may have escaped your notice, but there are more households in the country _without_ children than those with. They still take holidays in 'chunks'. Think again. "Most people" do not have school-age children, so why would they be taking their holidays "when the kids are off school." I said in chunks, i.e a week or two at a time. I accept that I made a mistake saying that everyone goes in the school holiday (I forgot that the demographgic of newsgroups is younger than the population!), but most peopel are still going to take a period holiday to go somewhere or other. You're claiming a majority where no such majority actually exists in the population. I still think it is. 12 million package holidays per year are sold so almost 25% of the population go away on an *organised* holiday each yer None of which backs up your orginal proposition, i.e. that "most people take 2 weeks holiday in the summer/easter when the kids are off school." In fact, it does the opposite. More 40% of the UK adult population does not take a holiday of four days or more at all. In that context you'd be hard-pressed to claim that the remaining 60% all take two-week holidays. The majority you claim does not exist. Fact. Most do IME. Well, in mine, most _don't_. Purely subjective. My subjective view is that the vast majority of people I know take one or two separate weeks off, Isn't this what I have been saying? No, you claimed the majority of people are taking two-week holidays. Not my use of the word "separate." -- Nick Cooper [Carefully remove the detonators from my e-mail address to reply!] The London Underground at War, and in Films & TV: http://www.nickcooper.org.uk/ |
#274
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On Sun, 09 Oct 2005 09:05:06 GMT, (Neil
Williams) wrote: On Sat, 08 Oct 2005 21:38:52 GMT, (Nick Cooper) wrote: So Oyster is crap because you can't keep track of something as simple as how much pre-pay you have on it? It is a fault, yes. It is one that TfL would be able to solve quite easily by obtaining a quantity of pocket validators and selling them at ticket offices (or by mail order) to those who want them. I believe they cost under a tenner a shot. Will people please stop getting so defensive and assuming that pointing out a limitation of Oyster is a statement that it is "crap", as this is not the case. Given that people can check how much Pre-Pay they have at the same "places" that they actually add the Pre-Pay in the first place, it's hardly a convincing argument. Would you say that a ATM card is "limited" because you can't tell how much money you have in your account unless you go to an ATM to check? -- Nick Cooper [Carefully remove the detonators from my e-mail address to reply!] The London Underground at War, and in Films & TV: http://www.nickcooper.org.uk/ |
#275
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![]() "Neil Williams" wrote in message ... On Sun, 9 Oct 2005 12:25:36 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)" wrote: They tried to prosecute some people for riding without a ticket from a stop with no machine They lost on the basis that as the pax hadn't been given the opportunity to buy a ticket so it was unreasonable to expect then to have done so. Last time I travelled in Hannover (circa 2000) it was possible to buy a ticket from the driver, even on a tram. Not anymore, tram drivers no longer sell tickets. Apart from passes the choices a Pre-purchased open ticket stamped in the machine on the tram or immediate use timed tickets bought from the machine at the stop, paid by smart card or coins, small discount for the smart card. tim |
#276
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![]() "Phil Richards" wrote in message .. . tim (moved to sweden) wrote: And this is in a town where it is possible to buy advanced undated single tickets for all rides which isn't currently an option in London. In London you do have the option of buying undated single tickets for the buses (Saver 6). I thought they'd stopped these. It took me quite some searching to find then info though. tim |
#277
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![]() "TKD" wrote in message ... Will people please stop getting so defensive and assuming that pointing out a limitation of Oyster is a statement that it is "crap", as this is not the case. This is not a limitation. The balance comes up on the screen of the bus and on the tube gates - there is no way that you can't have a rough idea of what you have. Strangely enough I have a stored value card for my local travel here. I don't use it to get to work, only for days out at the weekend. I usually haven't the slightest idea how much is on the card, even though I do get told the remaining balance each time I use it, it really is unrealistic to expect me to remember this from one month to the next. tim |
#278
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![]() "James Farrar" wrote in message ... On Sun, 9 Oct 2005 12:15:53 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)" wrote: "Nick Cooper" wrote in message ... Purely subjective. My subjective view is that the vast majority of people I know take one or two separate weeks off, Isn't this what I have been saying? Your original contention was: (a) a two-week block at Christmas; and (b) a two-week block at some other point in the year; and of time off not holiday allocation. (c) nothing else. I certainly did not say this. tim |
#279
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In article ,
(Nick Cooper) wrote: On Sat, 08 Oct 2005 17:09:09 GMT, (Neil Williams) wrote: On Sat, 8 Oct 2005 16:57:59 +0000 (UTC), "Richard Rundle" wrote: Yes, stamps inscribed 1st and 2nd were introduced in 1990. So, it dep ends on your definition of "recent" I guess. They weren't universal, I think. I have had stamps (1st/2nd) marked with the price much more recently than that, as I recall. The ones marked 1st or 2nd are the ones sold in books (6 or 12) and in vending machines. The come in larger packs than that. 100s, for example. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#280
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![]() "Nick Cooper" wrote in message ... On Sun, 9 Oct 2005 12:15:53 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)" wrote: However, hardly anyone I know gets that. FWIW It's bloody annoying and I hate having to waste my holiday days in this way, so I don't see it as getting a benefit. It is my contention that more people work in my world than in yours. Clearly your world doesn't include the public, retail or service sectors. Add to that a sizable chunk of other industries, and you'd be hard-pressed to claim a majority. I have worked in reatil, and ever there people booked their two week summer holiday as the norm. No-one is sensibly going to buy a monthly season on the 4th of December as they will not be using it from 25th to the 1st You mean "... _if_ they will not be using it from 25th to the 1st." Well obviously. If you're nitpicking about this what else have you nitpicked about? It's not nitpicking to point out a huge and fundamental flaw in your "argument." It was not a flaw in my arguement, just something so blindingly obviously a part of the arguement that I didn't bother to type it in at the end. 12 million package holidays per year are sold so almost 25% of the population go away on an *organised* holiday each yer None of which backs up your orginal proposition, i.e. that "most people take 2 weeks holiday in the summer/easter when the kids are off school." I have conceded the point about off school holidays, a two week summer holiday is anywhere betweem May and September In fact, it does the opposite. More 40% of the UK adult population does not take a holiday of four days or more at all. Where did you find this fact? I have never worked at a place where anybody never took full weeks off. In that context you'd be hard-pressed to claim that the remaining 60% all take two-week holidays. Obviously, Purely subjective. My subjective view is that the vast majority of people I know take one or two separate weeks off, Isn't this what I have been saying? No, you claimed the majority of people are taking two-week holidays. Not my use of the word "separate." No, I said the they were taking 2 weeks of holiday when they did not need to buy a pass. tim |
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