Charity shop'll sell yer some marbles for next to nothing. They'll perform wonderfully at 175C.The cashless society is interfering with my pastry making. I have no baking beads so I use coins on a piece of parchment. I am now chronically short of coins. Bank cards don’t taking kindly to 20 mins @ 175C.
got a tin of shrapnel you can have in exchange for a nice Eccles cake.The cashless society is interfering with my pastry making. I have no baking beads so I use coins on a piece of parchment. I am now chronically short of coins. Bank cards don’t taking kindly to 20 mins @ 175C.
Spot on .... they are attempting to push through digital ID cards right now, but would you really trust them to look after all your data in their databases??? They seem to fall over at will every time serious hackers pay them a visit !!Yes it will.
Years ago I.D. cards were mooted. Everyone was up in arms about government surveillance etc. A cashless society is exactly the same, they will know everything about you.
My mum's 88, she doesn't have a computer, (online banking) when cash goes, what does she do ?
Going to a City match the tram charged me £8.60 instead of £3.40. I only found out by chance, if I'd paid cash it simply wouldn't have happened.
Mock all you wish, its not as though it isnt happening in countries already
Yes it will.
Years ago I.D. cards were mooted. Everyone was up in arms about government surveillance etc. A cashless society is exactly the same, they will know everything about you.
My mum's 88, she doesn't have a computer, (online banking) when cash goes, what does she do ?
Going to a City match the tram charged me £8.60 instead of £3.40. I only found out by chance, if I'd paid cash it simply wouldn't have happened.
Thing is, other than the tip which is the staffs loss not the businesses, there isn’t really any loss. If you’d wanted your 40p change they’d have had to have provided it. That means paying to get coinage delivered from a company, then it means securing it outside opening hours. Your tenner needs banking, that means going to the bank, paying it in and being charged for the privilege. It’s been over ten years since I had to worry about transaction fees and bank charges but, even back then, from memory, debit card fees were only around 15p a transaction.I was in the Trafford centre this morning with the wife and we ordered two coffees and a cake totalling 9-60. I offered them a £10 note with the intention of telling them to keep the change and was told that they don't accept cash. Their loss, no tip and commission to pay on the card payment. We won't be going back.
I was in the Trafford centre this morning with the wife and we ordered two coffees and a cake totalling 9-60. I offered them a £10 note with the intention of telling them to keep the change and was told that they don't accept cash. Their loss, no tip and commission to pay on the card payment. We won't be going back.
Mock all you wish, its not as though it isnt happening in countries already
Really? You'll have to tell me some of the countries that have gone cashless
And despite all that, places had the cheek to charge you for paying by card as if it was ever free to bank cash.Thing is, other than the tip which is the staffs loss not the businesses, there isn’t really any loss. If you’d wanted your 40p change they’d have had to have provided it. That means paying to get coinage delivered from a company, then it means securing it outside opening hours. Your tenner needs banking, that means going to the bank, paying it in and being charged for the privilege. It’s been over ten years since I had to worry about transaction fees and bank charges but, even back then, from memory, debit card fees were only around 15p a transaction.
Who's the oppressor in this situation? Marks and Spencer?
Cash is completely pointless because of inflation.
£1 put into the right place will be worth more than £1 sat in your pocket. Virtually all cash below 10p is already effectively worthless because what can you buy for less than 10p?