Takes cards, notes, coins:What slim wallets are people using? I wonder if it's time to do that as a halfway house
![]()
Small enough for all pockets. Got mine in duty free. You'll find similar online.
Takes cards, notes, coins:What slim wallets are people using? I wonder if it's time to do that as a halfway house
![]()
Was thinking the other day that if I lost my phone or it was stolen with my wallet then I can't actually remember any current phone numbers to call for help.There was a thread on Reddit similar to this one. I will say the same thing, those of you who just use phones to pay with everything, not carry any cash, and/or have a bank card in its case, what the hell are you going to do if you lose your phone or even if your phone battery dies?
You can't call the bank or use an app to freeze/cancel your cards/accounts until you get home or where ever you have contact numbers stored as I am pretty sure you wont have a slip of paper with emergency numbers on your person at the time of losing your phone. You won't have any means to purchase anything as all your means to do so, is lost.
Personally I think it's silly to just use a single method to purchase. I have a wallet with coins, notes and a card in, a smaller one for my other cards, and also my phone which I don't actually use to purchase anything as I have not set it up but will do now these threads have reminded me to do so.
iphones have enough sand-bagging in a dead battery to continue to run apple pay even when battery can't turn on the screen/boot
(presumably there is a separate mcu that runs the token generation & nfc response - never investigated the architecture)
Not sure they're naturally "glitchy" but they certainly aren't 100% reliable. See it fair amount at the turnstiles on the underground with folk having to mash their phone or watch multiples times for it to work which is bloody annoying and a inconvenient to everyone else when it's rush-hour and everyone is just trying to funnel through quickly.Phone payments are really glitchy. Contactless is still where it's at.
My thoughts too. Although if it was 100% reliable, "wallets" supported all cards (Costco being one of my gripes) and pumps supported contactless then i might give it another whirl but, while i still have to carry cards it seems a bit pointless at the moment.I like tech, but I still don't trust it fully.
Got a A-Slim Doku wallet after @Raymond Lin posted it in a wallet thread, really good quality although there are probably thinner wallets.What slim wallets are people using? I wonder if it's time to do that as a halfway house![]()
A purse then?wallet with coins
Still 1.2m adults that don't have a bank account. How do they cope without one now? They are paying more for utilises, insurance (as many cheaper companies don't want to know about those without a bank account) etc.I admit I mostly pay via Apple Pay, however the huge dangers of a cashless society are also not lost on me.
We must always keep cash in our society.
Pretty sure they won't work anymore as most new cards are not embossed
The shop closes ofc.
Wait... you didnt really think the cashiers at your local supermarket are going to know the prices for every single item in the store, and then sit there with a calculator adding up your bill (taking into account special offers), and making a note of everything bought so they can update the stock database when things come back online?
It might be possible in little independent shops where everything is individually priced, but there's no way a supermarket is going to be able to operate without power.
That's ignoring the whole health and safety aspect of having a bunch of people wandering around a pitch black warehouse full of sharp shelf corners and objects to trip over/walk into
A purse then?![]()
Sadly they don't close - where I work had a plan in place for that eventuality as well.
Happened once in 18 years of retail work, lasted roughly 2 hours. Was actually kinda fun!
- All managers (store, deputy, department) to tills and pair up with a till operator.
- Keys from the cash office to open the till drawers manually.
- Calculator and notebook to estimate shopping value which was agreed with the customer/till operator
- Cash? Great - straightforward and customer goes home happy with their likely cheaper shopping
- Card? Manual Imprinter comes out and click-clack and customer goes on their merry way
- When power is back on Cash Office manually gets authorisation for every card transaction that occurred.
- The staff cuss out the area manager for being a nob and not letting us close the front doors.
A total eclipse of the cart.Luckily that happened in Summer!
They did a thing and dimmed the lights to make it a 'quiet hour' long ago. On the 21st December. Dark clouds in the sky. It was definitely a thing!
Sadly they don't close - where I work had a plan in place for that eventuality as well.
Happened once in 18 years of retail work, lasted roughly 2 hours. Was actually kinda fun!
- All managers (store, deputy, department) to tills and pair up with a till operator.
- Keys from the cash office to open the till drawers manually.
- Calculator and notebook to estimate shopping value which was agreed with the customer/till operator
- Cash? Great - straightforward and customer goes home happy with their likely cheaper shopping
- Card? Manual Imprinter comes out and click-clack and customer goes on their merry way
- When power is back on Cash Office manually gets authorisation for every card transaction that occurred.
- The staff cuss out the area manager for being a nob and not letting us close the front doors.
Thinking of past years, am I imagining it that there a time not long ago when it was almost frowned upon for a supermarket to permit customers to buy food with a credit card?That brings back memories! Back in 1996 I was working at the local Co-op and the same process was used there when there was a power cut.
The chances are the store will have emergency lighting, IIRC it's a requirement for fire safety as one of the things that is most likely to cause a fire in a retail store is a fault with the power so you need to still have enough lights to let people safely reach the exit if the power goes off/is turned off due to a fire.Wow, have to say I'm impressed - how did they handle the whole "people walking into things in the dark" thing? Handing out torches at the entrance?![]()
Still 1.2m adults that don't have a bank account. How do they cope without one now? They are paying more for utilises, insurance (as many cheaper companies don't want to know about those without a bank account) etc.
Yes but since when did the rich/torys care 1 jot about poor people? they don't, when they try and force a cashless society on us, they won't care about those 1.2m people, they will just be 'collateral damage' to them.