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Palace Going Cashless

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chris123 Flag hove actually 10 Jan 19 3.42pm Send a Private Message to chris123 Add chris123 as a friend

Originally posted by aquickgame2

Doesn't everybody have these...I'm shocked

Turning right!!! Ugh.

 

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Goal Machine Flag The Cronx 10 Jan 19 4.44pm Send a Private Message to Goal Machine Add Goal Machine as a friend

It progressive and good. Embrace technology. Personally, I try to avoid carrying cash as change gets lost or spent on tosh, it helps the bank balance.

It will also speed up service and is more accurate.

I give it 10-15 years until the UK becomes cashless. It will help massively with crime reduction – drug money etc.

 

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Eaglecoops Flag CR3 10 Jan 19 5.02pm Send a Private Message to Eaglecoops Add Eaglecoops as a friend

Originally posted by Goal Machine

It progressive and good. Embrace technology. Personally, I try to avoid carrying cash as change gets lost or spent on tosh, it helps the bank balance.

It will also speed up service and is more accurate.

I give it 10-15 years until the UK becomes cashless. It will help massively with crime reduction – drug money etc.

It won’t help with buying drugs or avoiding paying taxes though. Oh dear, did I say that out loud.

 

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YT Flag Oxford 10 Jan 19 5.13pm Send a Private Message to YT Add YT as a friend

Well CPFC catering has already gone, tasteless, heatless (in the case of the food) and coldnessless(in the case of the lager)...

 


Palace since 19 August 1972. Palace 1 (Tony Taylor) Liverpool 1 (Emlyn Hughes)

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est1905 Flag 10 Jan 19 5.35pm Send a Private Message to est1905 Add est1905 as a friend

I didn't realise it was legal to refuse cash if that was how a customer wished to pay. I have never believed that the customer is always right, that's an out of date pompous philosophy but dictating to the consumer how they pay for items seems a little, well, dictatorial! Cash used to be the strongest form of currency.

 

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chateauferret Flag 10 Jan 19 5.48pm

Originally posted by est1905

I didn't realise it was legal to refuse cash if that was how a customer wished to pay. I have never believed that the customer is always right, that's an out of date pompous philosophy but dictating to the consumer how they pay for items seems a little, well, dictatorial! Cash used to be the strongest form of currency.

It's legal to refuse a sale for whatever reason you like and you don't have to accept payment in any form; there's no such thing in law as "legal tender" except in the sense that a bank has to recognise it.

Cash is nowadays an expensive and awkward payment to handle because it is immediately negotiable (so attractive to steal), has to be physically taken to a bank or wherever you want to spend it, has to be counted to account for it, and comes only in certain denominations. Now that transaction charges for small purchases by card have dropped sharply and card payment processes have been streamlined by means such as chip and pin and contactless devices those methods are now seen by retailers as cheaper, easier and less risky.

I seldom carry much cash around since many years ago being relieved of my wallet by a scumbag with a knife in Garratt Lane. He got £4.50 for his trouble (and a fairly s*** wallet). Also I now use a distinctive wallet (Eagles one ) so that it can easily be described to police.

Edited by chateauferret (10 Jan 2019 5.50pm)

 


============
The Ferret
============

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xomnea Flag 10 Jan 19 6.17pm Send a Private Message to xomnea Add xomnea as a friend

Whole countries will soon (next 10 years?) be completely cashless, with Sweden tipped as being the first, followed closely by all the other Scandinavians. BBC article about it;

[Link]

Personally, I use my card/iPhone(I’m one of those) for near enough every purchase, so this won’t affect my match day experience. However, my old man will be in trouble town, forgetting his pin etc etc.

Whilst I feel everything is going in this direction, I feel like Selhurst Park is not an appropriate venue for old timers to either have to get with the times or basically be unable to buy anything. Horribly short sighted decision.

 

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Casual Flag Orpington 10 Jan 19 6.22pm Send a Private Message to Casual Add Casual as a friend

I do love cash.
But the day that it stops muggy little builders saying to me ‘keep the price keen mate, it will be pound notes’, will be great. No one wants your cash mate, put it through the bank and pay the vat you little rat.
Annnnnd relaaaaaax.

 

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pefwin Flag Where you have to have an English ... 10 Jan 19 6.38pm

though we had run out of dosh!

No problem with cashless transaction, however, I reckon it should be made compulsory that Sterling cash payments should be accepted in any f-2-F transction.

This cashless stuff is a bit big brother for me, and i still don't trust internet banking enough to fully commit.


Physcologically there needs to be something tactile about wealth, otherwise it become totally philosophical.

 


"Everything is air-droppable at least once."

"When the going gets tough, the tough call for close air support."

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croydon proud Flag Any european country i fancy! 10 Jan 19 7.31pm

Originally posted by rattus2002

As someone who works in the hospitality and events industry, I cannot tell you how much of a nuisance handling cash transactions is. It’s an incredibly time consuming and therefore expensive method of taking money, especially on the scale of the amount of people attending a football match.

I am unsure of the total amount of outlets at Selhurst but each one would have to have enough change to satisfy everyone that pays with a £10 or £20 note. Trust me, even a lot of those who may have the change will still purchase things with a note as they don’t want to stand and count the change when told the amount. If the change runs out it must be transferred from another outlet or from a central hub, so there will be 1/2 people on game day who probably just look after change. The cash from each outlet then has to be counted and checked at the end of the day. There are now high fees to pay for banking cash, regardless of whether it’s banked or done by securicor etc. Then there is the trust issue of staff handling cash and alcohol, a potent mix to anyone who is even slightly tempted. That’s before the increasing amount of forgeries that exist on some notes and certain coins. It adds up to a massive undertaking when card payments are much easier and slicker.

I am always surprised when people say they don’t carry a card, we get that sometimes but then I do wonder what would happen if they get a puncture on the way home or have some other emergency that the cash they are covering doesn’t cover. Surely it’s just a damn sight safer for younger people too?

We work across the UK and each year in London we find that card payments increase by around 10% from the year before. It’s the way of the world.

unless you lose your card, then a nice wad of cash might come in handy!

 

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Stuk Flag Top half 10 Jan 19 8.34pm Send a Private Message to Stuk Add Stuk as a friend

Originally posted by croydon proud

unless you lose your card, then a nice wad of cash might come in handy!

Or their system has a fault, broadband goes down or there's a power cut etc.

 


Optimistic as ever

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cryrst Flag The garden of England 10 Jan 19 8.44pm Send a Private Message to cryrst Add cryrst as a friend

Originally posted by pefwin

though we had run out of dosh!

No problem with cashless transaction, however, I reckon it should be made compulsory that Sterling cash payments should be accepted in any f-2-F transction.

This cashless stuff is a bit big brother for me, and i still don't trust internet banking enough to fully commit.


Physcologically there needs to be something tactile about wealth, otherwise it become totally philosophical.

Big brother is exactly why it is going this way.
Also all transactions put in an algorithm to send the right advert to the right person.
Bit like un deletable cookies.

 

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