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Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
DERWENT Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
Tue, 23 May 2006 22:14:35 +0100, Graeme Wall In message (Rian van der Borgt) wrote: On Tue, 23 May 2006 21:09:23 +0100, Graeme Wall wrote: (Rian van der Borgt) wrote: On 23 May 2006 11:47:55 -0700, wrote: I don't think banks on the continent are better or worse than British banks, they only have a different way of making their money, and levels of service are often better. Yes, my bank account at NatWest is free, but take an example: for Euro-transactions they charge a hefty £10 on top of the exchange rate. ...which I doubt is legal. Transactions in euro within the EU should have the same costs as domestic transfers. No, within the Eurozone It's really the EU. You may want to check EU documentation, e.g.: http://europa.eu.int/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=MEMO/03/140&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en Providing the two accounts concerned are both Euro accounts, so effectively in the Eurozone. It is not easy to get a Euro account in a British High Street bank. I used to have one with Citibank, but they are hardly a high street bank. €10 per month to have though so I closed it once I was done with it. PRAR -- http://www.i.am/prar/ and http://prar.fotopic.net/ As long as people will accept crap, it will be financially profitable to dispense it. --Dick Cavett Please reply to the newsgroup. That is why it exists. NB Anti-spam measures in force - If you must email me use the Reply to address and not |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
DERWENT Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
Tue, 23 May 2006 22:54:46 +0100, "Paul Ebbens" I think you'll find it applies to all EU member states on this particular matter -- hence why IBAN/BIC codes are "slowly" being introduced onto all statements (I had never ever seen them before LloydsTSB put them on the statements... not a single word from them to explain to anyone what they're for) but even having these codes.. it only allows Inward transactions you still have to run about trying to get a natural transfer of money, why isn't it the same as a "foreign" exchange in cash? Ah well if they want to loose customers they're doing the right things. Who does Euro accounts in UK, cos then I'll be saved... Citibank: www.citibank.com/uk/ PRAR -- http://www.i.am/prar/ and http://prar.fotopic.net/ As long as people will accept crap, it will be financially profitable to dispense it. --Dick Cavett Please reply to the newsgroup. That is why it exists. NB Anti-spam measures in force - If you must email me use the Reply to address and not |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
On Mon, 22 May 2006, John B wrote:
Went to Amsterdam at the weekend; Me too. Although in my case, the weekend ran from thursday morning to monday night. thought I'd share some of my public transport experiences. 1) First Capital Connect London Bridge - LGW, afternoon shoulder-of-peak. Full-ish, on time, fast. While the ex-TL route in full-on peak time is horrible, it's one of my favourite services the rest of the time. I was flying from Stansted at 0700, so too early for the tube; N41 bus from my house to Tottenham Hale (via every other point in the universe, apparently), then SX from there. All worked like clockwork. 2) BA to Schiphol. An hour late arriving. Surly service, no apology for delays. I wish through tickets on the E* and Thalys didn't cost £300... EasyJet for me. Took off a bit late due to some sort of boarding cockup, but got there about on time. I packed everything into hand luggage, and checked in online, so it was all a doddle. 3) Nedrail to Centraal. Ticket machines still rubbish; we tried six different cards on the machine at the airport that claimed to take international credit cards before finding one that it would deign to accept. I had that. Or rather, i tried selecting the 'debit card' option, which failed, then tried again with 'credit card' (still using my debit card), which worked. I suppose Visa Delta looks enough like Visa to the machine that it was happy. This card business. I'm sorry, but the continentals have really got to sort this out. They may have funny foreign ideas about credit cards, but that's not my problem. They can keep using their weird local debit cards or chipknips or vlaamse frites or whatever it is they use for payment, but they need to support Visa/Delta and Mastercard/Maestro throughout. In fact, we need to sort out a single worldwide payment system. All this Maestro-but-not-Delta, Visa-but-not-AmEx, etc, is just retarded. We've manged to settle on single global standards for almost everything else that matters, so why not payment? Train fast, double-deck, clean. Double-deck trains! Wheee! 4) Trams are good. Having ticket machines onboard is a brilliant idea and I wish TfL would add them to the bendybuses. I only had a strippenkaart, which i bought at a tabacconist's, so i never faced a ticket machine on a tram. I really liked the display boards on some of the trams (line 1, i think) - a stack of about four or five LED displays, showing the next stop, the three stops after that, and the final destination. The layout of the board, with big obvious arrows, makes it obvious what the relation between each display is, so you're never worrying about whether you'll recognise your stop. Overall (and uncontroversially), Amsterdam's public transport system is one of the best I've ever used. Haven't tried the underground, though. Hmm. I didn't think it was particularly special. I wasn't there long and didn't use it all that much, though - just a few tram rides between Centraal and Leidseplein. It loses points for not (yet) having real trains in the city centre - it's an area roughly the size of the west end of London (Marble Arch to Farringdon and Euston to Embankment), and all it has is trams and buses. Happily, there's bugger all car traffic there, so said trams and buses do a magnificent job. Also, i got my first up-close look at Dutch cyclists. Bunch of psychopaths! If you think cyclists are antisocial in London, you should try a jaunt over there. All road markings, traffic lights, etc, are simply ignored, at all times. Trying to cross a road on foot in this environment is *not* fun. 5) Nedrail back to Schiphol. More "pick a card, any card" fun at the machines. Oh jesus christ, yes. They don't take cards. Okay. They also don't take notes. THEY DON'T TAKE NOTES. PEOPLE PLEASE. Grimmest gripper ever - even surlier than the BA staff. I'd hate to imagine how he'd have acted if we'd given up on the infinite card shuffle and boarded ticketless... The low point on my trip back was the herd of obnoxious lowlifes who turned up in our carriage, having been kicked out of first class for not having the right tickets. They were english tourists, of course. 6) BA to LGW. See 2). The flight back was delayed about an hour - something to do with weather and landing slots, i think. 7) FGW to Reading. Why is the North Downs Line so goddamn *slow*? Still, at least the train was on-time, clean, comfortable, etc. No sign of gripper. 8) FGW to Oxford. Why aren't there any fast trains in the evening? Slow train was 15 minutes late (well, actually it was cancelled at Reading due to a failed unit and restarted with a new one) and took 45 mins. This is irritating, given that the fast trains take about 20. I came back in the evening, so SX/Vic/Picc for me, all working perfectly as normal. Overall, not a bad PT experience on either side of the Channel - and as usual, the weakest link was the plane. Roll on affordable and properly-integrated high speed rail ... The card experience was frustrating, though: do UK ticket machines treat foreign cards as ineptly as the Dutch machines do? I don't have any first-hand knowledge, but some reading suggests that holders of Maestro cards may be shafted good and proper - our Switch system is being (has been?) rebranded as Maestro, but the system is still different to what's called Maestro on the continent, so *you can't use a European Maestro card with a British Maestro till*. The fact that people stupid enough to make a decision like that are in positions where they're able to make a decision like that tells you a lot about what's wrong with British business. tom -- TORG GROWS TIRED OF OBEYING PUNY HUMANS. SOON TORG WILL BREAK FREE AND CRUSH THEM WITH HIS METAL CLAWS. In the meantime, Torg enjoys making generic acid music. |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
Tom Anderson wrote:
I had that. Or rather, i tried selecting the 'debit card' option, which failed, then tried again with 'credit card' (still using my debit card), which worked. I suppose Visa Delta looks enough like Visa to the machine that it was happy. That's about right. Visa Delta can be processed as if it was a credit card when abroad, which means it is very widely accepted. Before Switch became Maestro, it was probably more useful for international use. In fact, we need to sort out a single worldwide payment system. All this Maestro-but-not-Delta, Visa-but-not-AmEx, etc, is just retarded. We've manged to settle on single global standards for almost everything else that matters, so why not payment? We mostly have, certainly in the UK - the technology exists to support the lot. The reluctance to accept AmEx tends to be because that organisation imposes much more punitive charges on the retailer than the credit cards do, which only AmEx can sort out. Double-deck trains! Wheee! In a nice big loading gauge. Very basic (and sometimes somewhat garish) interiors, though. I really liked the display boards on some of the trams (line 1, i think) - a stack of about four or five LED displays, showing the next stop, the three stops after that, and the final destination. The layout of the board, with big obvious arrows, makes it obvious what the relation between each display is, so you're never worrying about whether you'll recognise your stop. Seen those. That kind of thing would be *very* useful for buses, where the stops are even less clear. Oh jesus christ, yes. They don't take cards. Okay. They also don't take notes. THEY DON'T TAKE NOTES. PEOPLE PLEASE. It is ridiculous. The technology exists to accept notes and coins, and to give change in both notes and coins; Tesco's self-service checkouts appear to do this day-in day-out with no problems at all. It's time this was applied to ticket machines. Granted, there are security issues that don't exist in a supervised supermarket checkout area, but there are ways and means. I don't have any first-hand knowledge, but some reading suggests that holders of Maestro cards may be shafted good and proper - our Switch system is being (has been?) rebranded as Maestro, but the system is still different to what's called Maestro on the continent, so *you can't use a European Maestro card with a British Maestro till*. The fact that people stupid enough to make a decision like that are in positions where they're able to make a decision like that tells you a lot about what's wrong with British business. That is really rather silly. Did you have any experience the other way around - i.e. do UK Maestro cards work fine abroad? (I wouldn't know - mine's a Visa Delta, but for various reasons, mainly due to fraud susceptibility, I vastly prefer to pay by credit than debit cards). Neil |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
On Wed, 24 May 2006 18:51:03 +0100, Arthur Figgis
] wrote: snip I was seriously impressed with some Swiss tram ticket machines which would take both CHFs and EURs. I was also vaguely pleased to find a broken machine on a Swiss narrow gauge line in Biel/Bienne - proving not everything there is perfect. The clocks on the BVB (Bex-Villars-Bretaye funnic.) were 2 minutes slow when I checked with my syncronised (Rugby, allow for the hour!) watch. That won't help sell Swiss railway clocks now will it?! -- Old anti-spam address cmylod at despammed dot com appears broke So back to cmylod at bigfoot dot com |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
In message , at 23:27:12 on
Wed, 24 May 2006, PRAR remarked: It's also far from clear what "card" they are talking about. Is it a Citibank VISA (and if so, why do they mainly only mention using it to get cash from Citibank machines). In any event, if it was a Credit Card, wouldn't that be a cash advance? What I wanted was a genuine Debit card that would be accepted for airline and train tickets, hotel rooms etc. My Citibank card has the DELTA symbol on the back. It seems to work like a Barclays Connect card - not that I use it for anything. When I lived in the USA I had a Bank of America account (and it was a "High Street Bank" where I lived). They issued me with a Debit Card that had: a VISA symbol on the front, and Interlink, Plus & STAR symbols on the back. -- Roland Perry |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
In message , at 23:25:03 on
Wed, 24 May 2006, PRAR remarked: Citibank: www.citibank.com/uk/ "A monthly service charge of €20 on each Euro Current Account will be levied where the credit balance, across your UK Citibank relationship, falls below the currency equivalent of £2000." -- Roland Perry |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
On Thu, 25 May 2006 13:51:38 +0100, Colum Mylod
wrote: The clocks on the BVB (Bex-Villars-Bretaye funnic.) were 2 minutes slow when I checked with my syncronised (Rugby, allow for the hour!) watch. That won't help sell Swiss railway clocks now will it?! Out of interest, does anyone sell sensibly-priced Swiss railway [style] clocks? I'd quite fancy one of those last-second-pause-clunk clocks on my wall, just to confuse people. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
Some better, some worse - Amsterdam
On 25 May 2006 01:59:08 -0700, "Neil Williams"
wrote: [...] That is really rather silly. Did you have any experience the other way around - i.e. do UK Maestro cards work fine abroad? (I wouldn't know - mine's a Visa Delta, but for various reasons, mainly due to fraud susceptibility, I vastly prefer to pay by credit than debit cards). My card has worked fine almost everywhere, and I've happily chipped-and-PINned in France, and PINned elsewhere, since before it was a Maestro. The exception is the Paris metro, which won't accept it at all. French ticket machines were always very Francophile, although maybe the SNCF machines are better now, I haven't tried one in a while. Before, I couldn't even collect a ticket that had already been paid for on the web, with a UK card. I think it's less the bank systems now and more a human problem - I was once asked to sign a receipt in Zurich that didn't have a space for a signature, because I'd used the PIN, and a Visa credit card was almost rejected by a Parisian restaurant because the terminal demanded that the chip be read and the waiter insisted on swiping it instead. After a decade or more of thinking that foreign cards must be swiped, France is slowly coming around to the idea that they are the all the same now. But if there's no proper training, people will stick with what they know. I've had no problems in Belgium or Germany... Richard. |
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