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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#81
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books 2
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... Things like remembering to get some when running low. Every supermarket I've seen has an ATM. Keeping change at home for when it may be needed. Supermarkets are double handy as you get the notes out of ATM outside and then break one or two up by buying single bananas or whatever, on one of their EPOS machines inside. I'm of an age where getting actual money out of a hole in the wall by simply pressing a few buttons still seems a bit magical. Even if it is my own money. The *******s have somewhat spoiled the illusion of late by filling the things with worn out notes, not crisp ones like before. "Would you like new notes sir ?" Those were the days. michael adams .... |
#82
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 08/07/2017 10:46, michael adams wrote: "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. michael adams ... The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. |
#83
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
"Nightjar" wrote in message ... On 08-Jul-17 7:43 AM, Stuart Noble wrote: On 07/07/2017 02:05, Dave Liquorice wrote: On Thu, 6 Jul 2017 12:14:51 +0100, Nightjar wrote: I keep a cheque book for the rare occasion where a small group needs money but doesn't handle electronic cash. Most accounts can accept a bank transfer (BACS) even if the account holder has no electronic banking facility. I probably write 3 or 4 a year, tops. I last wrote one in May 2016. Oct 2015, before that Dec 2012. I wrote one to myself and posted it to Santander, this being the only way to open a bond (apparently) Mine was similarly to my bank to open a bond. It seems they can't do an electronic transfer to an account that does not yet exist. But with ours, you open the account using your phone, get the account number immediately, so you have an account to do an electronic transfer to in a minute or two. Ours do the online ID verification immediately too. |
#84
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
On 09/07/2017 21:20, Rod Speed wrote:
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 08/07/2017 10:46, michael adams wrote: "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. michael adams ... The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? SteveW |
#85
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books 1
On Sun, 9 Jul 2017 10:00:54 +0100, "michael adams"
wrote: The problem with paying window cleaners wheelie bin cleaners etc is they expect payment when the job is done. But there's no guarentee that they'll have change for your £10 or £20 note. Which can create an awkward situation which is best avoided if at all possible. Obviously if they charge less, say £6, and you've only got £4 in change then a tenner out of an ATM is no real help. Never had any problems tending notes to my window cleaner, who also accepts cheques without complaint. |
#86
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 09/07/2017 21:20, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 08/07/2017 10:46, michael adams wrote: "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. michael adams ... The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. |
#87
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books 1
On Sun, 9 Jul 2017 21:05:36 +0100, DJC wrote:
On 09/07/17 17:13, Bob Eager wrote: On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 15:33:34 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Things like remembering to get some when running low. Every supermarket I've seen has an ATM. Keeping change at home for when it may be needed. Depends how often you go to the supermarket. Not often, if out in the sticks, and many have theor groceries delivered. Out in the sticks here the village shop does cash-back. We are fortunate enough to still have a reasonably successful village pub, they do cash back as well. G.Harman |
#88
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books 2
In article ,
michael adams wrote: The *******s have somewhat spoiled the illusion of late by filling the things with worn out notes, not crisp ones like before. "Would you like new notes sir ?" Those were the days. In those days with me it would have been 'would you like a new note, sir?' -- *Suicidal twin kills sister by mistake. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#89
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books 1
"charles" wrote in message ... In article , Handsome Jack wrote: charles posted And another problem with ATM's is they only dispense notes. Usually £20's but ocassionally £10's if you're lucky. The problem with paying window cleaners our window cleaner expects to be paid by BACS. It helps his accounting. How is it more helpful than a cheque in that respect? A BACS payment is itemised with references on a bank statement - a cheque is simply listed by number; further reference documents are needed to see where it originated. Also, cheques cost nearly £1 to process on a business account. In funny accounting money perhaps but not in real money most banks charge businesses on a total deposit basis not on a per cheque basis tim -- from KT24 in Surrey, England |
#90
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
On 09/07/2017 22:03, Rod Speed wrote:
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 09/07/2017 21:20, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 08/07/2017 10:46, michael adams wrote: "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. "Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. michael adams ... The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. Do you really think that the school would want hundreds of kids making thousands of small tranactions over the space of an hour on a single card machine? Or do you expect them to buy multiple machines for them to have at least one on each "stall"? How is the child supposed to collect the money onto the card when doing their "bob-a-job" type tasks? Are you expecting every family member, friend and neighbour who takes part to go to the hassle of setting up an online payment to the card just to pay 50p or so? SteveW |
#91
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
Steve Walker wrote
Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote michael adams wrote Tim Streater wrote Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. Tim Streater wrote Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. Do you really think that the school would want hundreds of kids making thousands of small tranactions over the space of an hour on a single card machine? Yes, particularly with a contactless machine that the brats just wave the card at. Leaves counting all that cash for dead. And I used to work at one of the relos small shops back in the early 50 when there were no cards at all and almost all of the transactions were done with cash in a similar way to what your kids do now. And cash counting at the end of the day and the banking was a complete pain in the arse. Or do you expect them to buy multiple machines for them to have at least one on each "stall"? I expect that if that sort of system was universal you could just get a few from the bank on enterprise day etc. How is the child supposed to collect the money onto the card when doing their "bob-a-job" type tasks? Pay to their mobile phone like the 3rd world does right now. Are you expecting every family member, friend and neighbour who takes part to go to the hassle of setting up an online payment to the card just to pay 50p or so? I expect almost everyone but the worst dinosaurs to have a mobile phone and it will be even easier to just pay to that than fart around with change in cash etc. Yes, that might have a few minor downsides like fewer situations where the kid is handed the smallest note that the person the job was done for has to hand and told to not worry about the change etc. And yes, one year I blitzed the entire close suburbs doing bob a job jobs and produced much more cash than anyone else in the scout troop did that year. |
#92
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
On 10/07/2017 22:39, Rod Speed wrote:
Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote michael adams wrote Tim Streater wrote Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. Tim Streater wrote Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. Do you really think that the school would want hundreds of kids making thousands of small tranactions over the space of an hour on a single card machine? Yes, particularly with a contactless machine that the brats just wave the card at. Leaves counting all that cash for dead. And I used to work at one of the relos small shops back in the early 50 when there were no cards at all and almost all of the transactions were done with cash in a similar way to what your kids do now. And cash counting at the end of the day and the banking was a complete pain in the arse. Or do you expect them to buy multiple machines for them to have at least one on each "stall"? I expect that if that sort of system was universal you could just get a few from the bank on enterprise day etc. How is the child supposed to collect the money onto the card when doing their "bob-a-job" type tasks? Pay to their mobile phone like the 3rd world does right now. I've already said that these are primary school children, very few of them have a mobile phone at all. My own children are 13, 11 and 9. Only the 13 year old has a mobile and that is because he has an hour journey each way to and from school and we want him to be able to tell us if the bus is late, he's missed it or he's lost his ticket, any other problem or just that he's going to be late back 'cos he's going into town with his mates. The 11 year old will get one in September when he moves to secondary school and has the same journey. SteveW |
#93
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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So far OT - cheque books
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 10/07/2017 22:39, Rod Speed wrote: Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote michael adams wrote Tim Streater wrote Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. Tim Streater wrote Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. Do you really think that the school would want hundreds of kids making thousands of small tranactions over the space of an hour on a single card machine? Yes, particularly with a contactless machine that the brats just wave the card at. Leaves counting all that cash for dead. And I used to work at one of the relos small shops back in the early 50 when there were no cards at all and almost all of the transactions were done with cash in a similar way to what your kids do now. And cash counting at the end of the day and the banking was a complete pain in the arse. Or do you expect them to buy multiple machines for them to have at least one on each "stall"? I expect that if that sort of system was universal you could just get a few from the bank on enterprise day etc. How is the child supposed to collect the money onto the card when doing their "bob-a-job" type tasks? Pay to their mobile phone like the 3rd world does right now. I've already said that these are primary school children, very few of them have a mobile phone at all. No reason why they can't have a family one when doing that sort of bob a job type work. My own children are 13, 11 and 9. Only the 13 year old has a mobile and that is because he has an hour journey each way to and from school and we want him to be able to tell us if the bus is late, he's missed it or he's lost his ticket, any other problem or just that he's going to be late back 'cos he's going into town with his mates. The 11 year old will get one in September when he moves to secondary school and has the same journey. The younger ones can borrow the 13 year old's one when doing the bob a job type work. |
#94
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So far OT - cheque books
On 11/07/2017 00:05, Rod Speed wrote:
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 10/07/2017 22:39, Rod Speed wrote: Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote michael adams wrote Tim Streater wrote Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. Tim Streater wrote Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. Do you really think that the school would want hundreds of kids making thousands of small tranactions over the space of an hour on a single card machine? Yes, particularly with a contactless machine that the brats just wave the card at. Leaves counting all that cash for dead. And I used to work at one of the relos small shops back in the early 50 when there were no cards at all and almost all of the transactions were done with cash in a similar way to what your kids do now. And cash counting at the end of the day and the banking was a complete pain in the arse. Or do you expect them to buy multiple machines for them to have at least one on each "stall"? I expect that if that sort of system was universal you could just get a few from the bank on enterprise day etc. How is the child supposed to collect the money onto the card when doing their "bob-a-job" type tasks? Pay to their mobile phone like the 3rd world does right now. I've already said that these are primary school children, very few of them have a mobile phone at all. No reason why they can't have a family one when doing that sort of bob a job type work. My own children are 13, 11 and 9. Only the 13 year old has a mobile and that is because he has an hour journey each way to and from school and we want him to be able to tell us if the bus is late, he's missed it or he's lost his ticket, any other problem or just that he's going to be late back 'cos he's going into town with his mates. The 11 year old will get one in September when he moves to secondary school and has the same journey. The younger ones can borrow the 13 year old's one when doing the bob a job type work. Far easier just to use cash! Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. I feel that there would be far fewer problems with debt if people actually used cash (or even cheques) to pay for things instead of just swiping a card or having money automatically taken from their account. SteveW |
#95
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So far OT - cheque books
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 11/07/2017 00:05, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news On 10/07/2017 22:39, Rod Speed wrote: Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote michael adams wrote Tim Streater wrote Our village has no pub, no garage, no shop. Tim Streater wrote Yes to church and Village Hall. I already indicated the unsuitability of our VH to host an ATM. You could break in with a tin opener. Stone me. If a village has no pub, no garage, and no shop WTF does it need an ATM for ? As I very much doubt that the High Street in Midsomer Streater, or wherever it is, is lined with drug dealers or prozzies, somehow. Normal business practice is to locate ATMs in places where people are are most likely to need cash, or put the other way round, the places where people are likely to need cash are the most likely places to find an ATM. There are ptobably laboratory chimpanzees capable of working that one for themselves, if you could actually design the experiment and had enough bananas. The trouble is that you often find that you need cash when you are at home - kids need money for the bus ticket to school; Not with a well organised public transport system that has an electronic card you just wave at the post at the bus stop. window or wheelie-bin cleaner needs paying; The 3rd world has systems that allow any mobile phone to pay any other mobile phone anything you like, no cash required. Works fine in the first world too. kids need cash for some event happening at school the next day, etc. No reason why that can't be done with a card which can only be used for a specific type of payment like that. Time the first world got its act into gear on that stuff. We already have that for benefits, what you can buy is restricted so you can't buy fags and grog etc, just food etc. That is no use for this purpose Wrong. - one of the things my younger children do at school is called Enterprise day. The children make things and bring in old toys, books and DVDs, which they then sell to each other with the money being split between school funds and charity. As they are from the age of 4 to 11, they don't have bank accounts with payment cards, mobile phones or other facilities. They need cash and it needs to be small denominations. No they dont, the card can have that as a category so the brats can only spend on that. We obviously know about these in advance, but sometimes the day suddenly changes. And when the card has categorys that it can only be spent on it will work fine whenever it happens to be. Similarly they can be given a pound by the school and told to try and use it to make some money - our middle son bought polish at the pound shop and polished family's shoes for a small payment. How else do family and friends pay a small amount to a young child for passing on to the school? Same way, have the school as a category the card the kid gets can only spend at. So your account can have a number of cards, the kids get one each and those cards can only be spent at the school. Do you really think that the school would want hundreds of kids making thousands of small tranactions over the space of an hour on a single card machine? Yes, particularly with a contactless machine that the brats just wave the card at. Leaves counting all that cash for dead. And I used to work at one of the relos small shops back in the early 50 when there were no cards at all and almost all of the transactions were done with cash in a similar way to what your kids do now. And cash counting at the end of the day and the banking was a complete pain in the arse. Or do you expect them to buy multiple machines for them to have at least one on each "stall"? I expect that if that sort of system was universal you could just get a few from the bank on enterprise day etc. How is the child supposed to collect the money onto the card when doing their "bob-a-job" type tasks? Pay to their mobile phone like the 3rd world does right now. I've already said that these are primary school children, very few of them have a mobile phone at all. No reason why they can't have a family one when doing that sort of bob a job type work. My own children are 13, 11 and 9. Only the 13 year old has a mobile and that is because he has an hour journey each way to and from school and we want him to be able to tell us if the bus is late, he's missed it or he's lost his ticket, any other problem or just that he's going to be late back 'cos he's going into town with his mates. The 11 year old will get one in September when he moves to secondary school and has the same journey. The younger ones can borrow the 13 year old's one when doing the bob a job type work. Far easier just to use cash! Not when everyone but real dinosaurs get into the habit of paying mobile to mobile and when the kids show up offering to do simple work, there is no other easy way to pay them. Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. I feel that there would be far fewer problems with debt if people actually used cash (or even cheques) to pay for things instead of just swiping a card or having money automatically taken from their account. Sure, but thats a long lost argument now. And I can't see that a cheque is any different to a card in that regard anyway. |
#96
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So far OT - cheque books
On Mon, 10 Jul 2017 23:48:31 +0100, Steve Walker wrote:
I've already said that these are primary school children, very few of them have a mobile phone at all. My own children are 13, 11 and 9. Only the 13 year old has a mobile and that is because he has an hour journey each way to and from school and we want him to be able to tell us if the bus is late, he's missed it or he's lost his ticket, any other problem or just that he's going to be late back 'cos he's going into town with his mates. The 11 year old will get one in September when he moves to secondary school and has the same journey. Same here. They had a 2 minute walk to the station, about 30 minutes on the train, and a 10 minute walk the other end. It wasn't uncommon for there to be fairly major train problems (it's the coastal terminus for the main North Kent line from London). Older son got his phone when he went to secondary school. Younger one got his two years later (very important for him as he had just been diagnosed as diabetic, and it made him feel safer). We paid the basic monthly charge until they got jobs. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
#97
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So far OT - cheque books
In article ,
Steve Walker wrote: Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. I feel that there would be far fewer problems with debt if people actually used cash (or even cheques) to pay for things instead of just swiping a card or having money automatically taken from their account. +1 -- *Friends help you move. Real friends help you move bodies. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#98
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So far OT - cheque books
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Steve Walker wrote: Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. I feel that there would be far fewer problems with debt if people actually used cash (or even cheques) to pay for things instead of just swiping a card or having money automatically taken from their account. +1 very true ... |
#99
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So far OT - cheque books
On 11/07/2017 04:28, Rod Speed wrote:
"Steve Walker" wrote in message news Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? I'd definitely pay cash in that case. -- Max Demian |
#100
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So far OT - cheque books
In article ,
Max Demian wrote: On 11/07/2017 04:28, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? I'd definitely pay cash in that case. Not that long ago Lidl didn't accept credit cards. Debit cards or cash. -- * What do they call a coffee break at the Lipton Tea Company? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#101
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So far OT - cheque books
"Max Demian" wrote in message o.uk... On 11/07/2017 04:28, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? Yep. I'd definitely pay cash in that case. Seems rather silly to bother when its only 0.5% Thats 50c in $100 and I hardly ever spend over $50, let alone $100. |
#102
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So far OT - cheque books
"Bob Eager" wrote in message ... On Mon, 10 Jul 2017 23:48:31 +0100, Steve Walker wrote: I've already said that these are primary school children, very few of them have a mobile phone at all. My own children are 13, 11 and 9. Only the 13 year old has a mobile and that is because he has an hour journey each way to and from school and we want him to be able to tell us if the bus is late, he's missed it or he's lost his ticket, any other problem or just that he's going to be late back 'cos he's going into town with his mates. The 11 year old will get one in September when he moves to secondary school and has the same journey. Same here. They had a 2 minute walk to the station, about 30 minutes on the train, and a 10 minute walk the other end. It wasn't uncommon for there to be fairly major train problems (it's the coastal terminus for the main North Kent line from London). Older son got his phone when he went to secondary school. Younger one got his two years later (very important for him as he had just been diagnosed as diabetic, and it made him feel safer). We paid the basic monthly charge until they got jobs. We have a few plans with no monthly charge at all, you only pay for the calls or texts or data you actually use and pay peanuts for those usages charges too, 12c for 1 minute calls and for texts. Ideal for those emergency phones. |
#103
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So far OT - cheque books
On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 15:48:41 +0100, Max Demian wrote:
On 11/07/2017 04:28, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? I'd definitely pay cash in that case. I use credit card and debit card in Aldi and there is no surcharge. I just checked yesterday's bill (and asked my son, who works there) -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
#104
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So far OT - cheque books
"Bob Eager" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 15:48:41 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 11/07/2017 04:28, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? I'd definitely pay cash in that case. I use credit card and debit card in Aldi and there is no surcharge. I just checked yesterday's bill (and asked my son, who works there) Who the hell needs credit cards? I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. If i can't, tough ****. |
#105
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So far OT - cheque books
Bob Eager wrote
Max Demian wrote Rod Speed wrote Steve Walker wrote Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? I'd definitely pay cash in that case. I use credit card and debit card in Aldi and there is no surcharge. I just checked yesterday's bill (and asked my son, who works there) Different country. |
#106
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So far OT - cheque books
"bm" wrote in message web.com... "Bob Eager" wrote in message ... On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 15:48:41 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 11/07/2017 04:28, Rod Speed wrote: "Steve Walker" wrote in message news Cash also has a great advantage that as a tangible object, they can see how much they have, how much things cost, etc. Clearly not a major consideration for those who buy stuff at the supermarkets etc now with cards and their phones. Its now only the local aldi where you see many paying with cash anymore and ours accept any type of card with a 0.5% surcharge if you use a card to pay for the stuff you buy. You have to *pay* to use a card in Aldi? I'd definitely pay cash in that case. I use credit card and debit card in Aldi and there is no surcharge. I just checked yesterday's bill (and asked my son, who works there) Who the hell needs credit cards? Its not needs so much as they can be quite useful. I have one with no fee which can be handy when you come across something that isnt cheap and so costs more than you choose to keep in your main transaction account while you earn a decent interest rate on your substantial cash. They are also handy for avoiding needing to have a float in your transaction account and pay the credit card off in full every month from the account that has a substantial amount of cash in it at the highest interest rate you can find. And that can be completely automated too, much more convenient than farting around maintaining an adequate float in the transaction account. Can also be handy for when the bank's system goes flat on its face for a few hours or even a day or so as all bank systems do occasionally. I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. Just another silly senile old dinosaur. I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. If i can't, tough ****. |
#107
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So far OT - cheque books
On 12/07/2017 01:52, bm wrote:
Who the hell needs credit cards? Anybody who want to hire a car for one. Very difficult (although maybe possible) to do without. I have never used the "credit" facility of a credit card, but having one has made life simpler on numerous occasions. I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. If i can't, tough ****. I'm with you there in general, but a bit tricky buying a house (not that a credit card would help in that case) -- Chris B (News) |
#108
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So far OT - cheque books
"bm" wrote in message web.com... Who the hell needs credit cards? Anyone who wants to "easily" buy things mail order for one. Before the internet really took off Maplin catalogues were available in the magazine section of W.H.Smith. Can't remember the price. As I lived near one of their early branches this didn't really affect me. But for anyone else who wanted to buy something, it meant either fannying around writing a letter and maybe enclosing one of the order forms they'd sent with your first order, and either writing a cheque and posting it in the letterbox round the corner, assuming you had a stamp, or trotting off to the post office and joining the queue to buy a postal order and a stamp. With a credit card you simply called the number on the back of the catalogue gave them all your details and that was it. Same with a lot of mail order businesses that advertised in specialist/trade/hobby magazines. That was a good reason for first applying for one, and after that the other advanatages soon became clear. I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. Kids today eh ? What would they know ? I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. But not being able to buy at a distance puts you at a real diadvantage where price is concerned - even without the internet and price comparison sites. Just by comparing catalogues or adverts in the back of magazines. Not everybody with a credit card goes berserk and loses thousands of pounds on poker sites. Without checking ISTR most people pay them off every month. For the less well organised who don't spend hours bent over spreadsheets the detailed statement they send every month at no extra cost, in addition to the PDF can be a useful way of keeping track of spending If i can't, tough ****. You really shouldn't be so hard on yourself. There's a whole world of internet shopping out there, just waiting to fulfil your every earthly desire. Same as the Argos catalogue really only with ten times more stuff. michael adams .... |
#109
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So far OT - cheque books
On Wed, 12 Jul 2017 08:26:59 +0100, Chris B wrote:
On 12/07/2017 01:52, bm wrote: Who the hell needs credit cards? Anybody who want to hire a car for one. Very difficult (although maybe possible) to do without. And also to get the statutory consumer protection on larger purchases. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
#110
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So far OT - cheque books
"michael adams" wrote in message o.uk... "bm" wrote in message web.com... Who the hell needs credit cards? Anyone who wants to "easily" buy things mail order for one. Before the internet really took off Maplin catalogues were available in the magazine section of W.H.Smith. Can't remember the price. As I lived near one of their early branches this didn't really affect me. But for anyone else who wanted to buy something, it meant either fannying around writing a letter and maybe enclosing one of the order forms they'd sent with your first order, and either writing a cheque and posting it in the letterbox round the corner, assuming you had a stamp, or trotting off to the post office and joining the queue to buy a postal order and a stamp. With a credit card you simply called the number on the back of the catalogue gave them all your details and that was it. Same with a lot of mail order businesses that advertised in specialist/trade/hobby magazines. That was a good reason for first applying for one, and after that the other advanatages soon became clear. I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. Kids today eh ? What would they know ? I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. But not being able to buy at a distance puts you at a real diadvantage where price is concerned - even without the internet and price comparison sites. Just by comparing catalogues or adverts in the back of magazines. Not everybody with a credit card goes berserk and loses thousands of pounds on poker sites. Without checking ISTR most people pay them off every month. For the less well organised who don't spend hours bent over spreadsheets the detailed statement they send every month at no extra cost, in addition to the PDF can be a useful way of keeping track of spending If i can't, tough ****. You really shouldn't be so hard on yourself. There's a whole world of internet shopping out there, just waiting to fulfil your every earthly desire. Same as the Argos catalogue really only with ten times more stuff. Rubbish. |
#111
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So far OT - cheque books
In article , Chris B
writes On 12/07/2017 01:52, bm wrote: Who the hell needs credit cards? Anybody who want to hire a car for one. Very difficult (although maybe possible) to do without. I have never used the "credit" facility of a credit card, but having one has made life simpler on numerous occasions. I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. If i can't, tough ****. I'm with you there in general, but a bit tricky buying a house (not that a credit card would help in that case) I once witnessed a guy buy an £80k motor home with his credit card - and he didn't complain when the salesman very apologetically said they would have to charge him and additional 2.5% to cover the fee. -- bert |
#112
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So far OT - cheque books
In article , Tim Streater
writes In article , Chris B wrote: On 12/07/2017 01:52, bm wrote: Who the hell needs credit cards? Anybody who want to hire a car for one. Very difficult (although maybe possible) to do without. I have never used the "credit" facility of a credit card, but having one has made life simpler on numerous occasions. +1 No need to go into debt just because you have a credit card. Has the advantage of giving better consumer protection -- bert |
#113
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So far OT - cheque books
"bert" wrote in message ... In article , Chris B writes On 12/07/2017 01:52, bm wrote: Who the hell needs credit cards? Anybody who want to hire a car for one. Very difficult (although maybe possible) to do without. I have never used the "credit" facility of a credit card, but having one has made life simpler on numerous occasions. I'm almost 70 and never needed/wanted one. I prefer to buy what i want, if i can. If i can't, tough ****. I'm with you there in general, but a bit tricky buying a house (not that a credit card would help in that case) I once witnessed a guy buy an £80k motor home with his credit card - and he didn't complain when the salesman very apologetically said they would have to charge him and additional 2.5% to cover the fee. I bought a brand new car using a debit card a full 10 years ago now and the dealer principal was a bit surprised that I wanted to do that but was quite happy to do it when he realised it wouldn't cost him a cent to do it like that. |
#114
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So far OT - cheque books
"bert" wrote in message ... In article , Tim Streater writes In article , Chris B wrote: On 12/07/2017 01:52, bm wrote: Who the hell needs credit cards? Anybody who want to hire a car for one. Very difficult (although maybe possible) to do without. I have never used the "credit" facility of a credit card, but having one has made life simpler on numerous occasions. +1 No need to go into debt just because you have a credit card. Has the advantage of giving better consumer protection Not here it doesn't, identical consumer protection with debit and credit cards. |
#115
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So far OT - cheque books
"Rod Speed" wrote in message ... .. I bought a brand new car using a debit card a full 10 years ago now and the dealer principal was a bit surprised that I wanted to do that but was quite happy to do it when he realised it wouldn't cost him a cent to do it like that. Course he was. Because if the wheels fell off before you got to the end of the street, there was no possibility of a chargeback. Possesion is nine tenths of the law, and your money was safe in his bank account earning interest. What's not for him to like ? michael adams .... |
#116
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So far OT - cheque books 1
On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 21:56:45 +0100, Peter Johnson wrote:
Never had any problems tending notes to my window cleaner, who also accepts cheques without complaint. uk.d-i-y, hire window cleaners? |
#117
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So far OT - cheque books
michael adams wrote
Rod Speed wrote I bought a brand new car using a debit card a full 10 years ago now and the dealer principal was a bit surprised that I wanted to do that but was quite happy to do it when he realised it wouldn't cost him a cent to do it like that. Course he was. Because if the wheels fell off before you got to the end of the street, there was no possibility of a chargeback. Even more pig ignorant than you usually manage. It’s a Visa with identical chargeback rights as their credit cards here. And that was a brand new car with a 5 year warranty, the longest available in this country at that time so even if the wheels had fallen off, it would have been stupid to do a chargeback in the circumstances anyway. And its such a reliable brand that I didn’t have even a single warranty claim or even quibble in the 5 years either. Possesion is nine tenths of the law, Like hell it is with consumer transactions like that. and your money was safe in his bank account earning interest. And would have been if I had used the more traditional way of paying for a new car which hadn't been financed, a bank cheque. What's not for him to like ? Even sillier and more pig ignorant than you usually manage, and that’s saying something. |
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