> Mike Rosing[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> 
> On Tue, 9 Apr 2002, Ken Brown wrote:
> 
> > I'd rather have stiff cards than floppy paper ones. At least you can put
> > them into  the slot of a machine easily.
> 
> But with an RF tag you'd not even have to pull it out of your pocket :-)
> 
Putting RF Tags in cash is one of those ideas with Unintended Consequences.
Muggers would love having a way of determining which victims are carrying a
wad, as would many salesmen (and JBTs looking to perform a 'civil 
confiscation' on 'a sum of currency'.)

> > But paper money is such a 20th-century thing! These days we're slowly
> > drifting back to higher value metal coins (2 pounds out for a few years
> > now, 5 pounds coming soon I think). Much more fun. Feels like real
> > treasure!  Less of the floppy stuff, we want our ecash to look like real
> > cash.
> 
> 18th century actually.  And the point is the same - people don't like to
> change (pun intended!)
> 
> Patience, persistence, truth,
> Dr. mike
> 
I was living in Britain (and of an allowance-recieving age) when
decimalization
occured. While we lost the big penny, we gained the 50p piece. In those
days,
it was a large, heavy, seven-sided coin, bigger than a US half-dollar, and
worth 
$1.20. It felt good in your pocket. Since then, the Brits have shrunk it to
a
much smaller size. Do they still call the 1 pound coins 'maggies'?

Actually, the mutability of British currency is quite astonishing to
Americans.
Bills and coins seem to change size and/or color every few years. Of 
course, there's a good chance Britain will join the Euro soon, which would
be another change.

Re going back to coins - it's not happening everywhere. The US Mint would 
love to get rid of the $1 bill, but the proposed replacements have been 
resounding failures. In the mid-70's they started minted 'pseudo-silver' 
dollars for the Bicentennial. While fun, these were just too big, and did 
not work in vending machines. A few years later they tried the 'Susan B 
Anthony' dollar, but it was rejected as well - it was similar in size and 
color to a quarter, and the two could be easily confused. Just about a 
year ago, they tried again, with the 'Sacagawea' or 'Golden Dollar'.
This is a very handsome coin, gold in color, but it was the same size
as a SBA dollar (to fit the machines). You can still confuse it with a
quarter in your pocket or in the dark. It's been months since I've seen
one.

Peter Trei




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