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  • #16
    Originally posted by Mike Blakesley View Post
    Many arcades have machines which will turn a credit card into
    tokens. (Or bills, too.)
    Exactly, Mike! Our machines are operated by some outside concessionaire,
    and I assume the theater gets a cut of the of whatever the games take in.
    There is an ATM-like machine near the games that can take cash or credit
    cards and dispense the the gaming cards. The theater staff has nothing to do
    with the game operations or handling money for them. Occasionally a customer
    will go to the box office and claim they lost a dollar or some change in the
    machine that dispenses the game cards, and the boxofficeperson will usually
    take their word for it, and refund their lost money from the theater cash-box,
    and they have some sort of 'refund log' they keep for the game-guy and
    the next time he comes in they sort it all out.

    Ryan Gallagher commented that "nobody carries cash anymore". The other
    day I was with a friend in downtown San Francisco when we were approached
    by a vagrant asking for 'spare change" and it occurred to me that on most days,
    the panhandlers on the street likely had more cash/change in their pockets
    than I did. I rarely have any actual cash/change on me any more. I'm sure
    there are whole months that have gone by during which I've carried zero
    amount of currency. I do keep a couple of $20's stashed at work, in case
    my UBER app stops working & I need to call a cab or something or if I
    want to grab lunch for myself at a sidewalk street vendor of which there
    are many here in SF, but even a lot of those people have wireless credit
    card terminals or an app on their phone that scans cards. So far this
    month, I haven't left the house with any cash on me yet.

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    • #17
      I have not carried cash since COVID, mainly because I am immunosuppressed due to the kidney transplant, and cash is a good way to spread germs. But I will stop at my bank and get some if needed. We also buy some food fresh directly from farms which are not too far away, fresh bread, bacon, eggs veggies, etc are but a number of items we get. Forty organic eggs for $15 today is a good deal even back when eggs were cheap. My better half makes and sells pottery at shows, and she will take cash or Venmo only. But the cash is deposited into her account the next day. Debit cards, etc, are safer ways to pay these days.

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      • #18
        Originally posted by Mark Gulbrandsen View Post
        I have not carried cash since COVID, mainly because I am immunosuppressed due to the kidney transplant, and cash is a good way to spread germs. But I will stop at my bank and get some if needed. We also buy some food fresh directly from farms which are not too far away, fresh bread, bacon, eggs veggies, etc are but a number of items we get. Forty organic eggs for $15 today is a good deal even back when eggs were cheap. My better half makes and sells pottery at shows, and she will take cash or Venmo only. But the cash is deposited into her account the next day. Debit cards, etc, are safer ways to pay these days.
        I’ve been slow to adopt “tap to pay” or putting payment methods on my phone. But if I was immunosuppressed I’d be all over it. Everyone will have touched those PIN code keypads!

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Jim Cassedy View Post

          Exactly, Mike!
          Also Jim, something else weird is going on with your posts. Last several the quote blocks are not reacting to the markup, I wonder if some characters are being “escaped” on your end, that might also explain the broken images?

          EDIT, weird, after the page reloaded when I posted that, they showed up quoted properly. Maybe that one is on my end.

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          • #20
            Originally posted by Leo Enticknap View Post
            ...
            My initial reaction after reading the first paragraph is that Internet access is now as important as electricity to many businesses, because without it, you simply can't do your core business; and that therefore, loss of Internet service should be factored into disaster planning that publicly traded companies are required to do by law, and private ones and nonprofits should also do if their leadership has any sense. That could be as simple as having a cellular router/access point available as an alternative, all the way up to more robust and pricey strategies....
            Having a second ISP via cellular would certainly keep your business running if the power outage was not wide enough to take out the power to Cell towers. I see that you can get Cell based ISP service for as little as $35/month. That is a pretty inexpensive insurance policy.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Ed Gordon View Post

              Having a second ISP via cellular would certainly keep your business running if the power outage was not wide enough to take out the power to Cell towers. I see that you can get Cell based ISP service for as little as $35/month. That is a pretty inexpensive insurance policy.
              This is all pretty academic for Jim, the theatre in question i believe is a national chain, where such decisions are done at corporate, nor are such decisions left to projectionists. But for every indy cinema it's great advice.

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