I haven't seen that Paulster. I prefer Canada and Yurp when they come to the table with the credit card thing, put in the tip, scan the card and bam done.
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I haven't seen that Paulster. I prefer Canada and Yurp when they come to the table with the credit card thing, put in the tip, scan the card and bam done.
A restaurant here (Crosscut Pizza in Ned for anyone in these parts) has hand-held devices the servers carry to input your order. And when it comes time to pay, it's easy peasy to each pay your own shit, they just tag what you ordered and you give them your card and boom! Slightly different than what you describe, more Old Goat friendly since no QR or phone app/input required. Just an old fashioned credit card.
I wish more places would invest in that type of point of sale system.
I’ve been so broke for so long (plus, Covid) I can’t hardly remember eating at a restaurant other than one where if you’re ordering while seated, you’re in your car.
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OG, I will say that I would trust Apple with my CC info more than almost any website I'd be shopping on. Also, any CC transactions that aren't authorized are required to be refunded by law. So zero risk to you for storing your CC on your phone (other than the hassle of replacement cards) and Apple Pay is very convenient for lots of things. Made it all the way to checkout at the store the other day (I walked up like half a mile to get there, too), and had forgot my wallet. Luckily they take Apple Pay so I didn' t have to waste a trip.
The cost of the devices isn't trivial, especially if you're trying to put one in each server's hand, plus it requires a reliable network to run on. It's not rocket surgery but it can be tough to get all the details right in a smaller town where your usual IT consultant is the assistant manager's boyfriend's uncle who writes websites and installs routers on the side.
I'm a computer nerd, and while I love restaurants that have their menu online with seamless takeout ordering, if I'm sitting down, I want to look at a piece of paper and ask a human if things are gluten free or not (and judge how much I trust the answer based on delivery).
I'll still tip 20% on takeout, though, because a lot of times that ends up going to someone who gets to spend their shift working a counter, answering the phone, seating people, etc, and not getting anywhere near the level of tips the servers are. That person will appreciate an extra $5 or $10 more than most.
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I am sure they're not cheap. And I agree, I want a paper menu and want to talk to a human, I'm the one that started the rant. But the handheld devices to take orders and handle paying are smooth AF. I am sure it isn't cheap to put one in each server's hands, and I am sure IT support is not insignificant. And of course quality of food and ambiance and beers on tap or whatever trumps smooth ordering/paying. But the fact that I actually appreciate the experience enough to even mention it here means it makes money for them. And it surely reduces server/kitchen fuckups because they enter it in front of you and repeat your order to you, and that's what gets sent to the kitchen. I have no doubt that it saves/makes them money in ways that are hard to quantify.
Mr. Pink agrees……
https://youtu.be/WXXPYxyn5mA
In New Zealand one went up to the front to settle the bill on the way out, even in fancy places. But they don’t (usually) tip there.
TWIS (the woman I’m seeing) always, always has to ask about the ingredients and makes substitutions for her order. That a) wouldn’t work in the order by scanning, and b) is kind of annoying, probably more so for the server.
The one place that I have experience with this also taxed the tips.
Perhaps not uncommon, but in many (most?) states, very definitely not legal. In some--such as Montana--even the normal practice of servers tipping out other staff (bartenders who mix their drinks, kitchen staff, etc) a small percentage of their own tips cannot be mandatory, as by law the tips belong to the server.
The place I worked adjusted their policy to deal with the legal issue to be "we acknowledge that participating in a tip-sharing program is voluntary; you may out if you so choose, and we will post the names of those who do in the kitchen." If you want to be an ass about it, you may, but we'll let the kitchen crew know.
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The fake politesse of trash companies like Amazon. Fuckers, you knew it wouldn’t arrive, you don’t give a fuck, and you don’t want to say that. Eat shit fuckers
Leaky alkaline batteries. Seriously. WTF is going on with battery manufacturers these days?! I've had SO many Kirkland Sig (rebranded Duracells), actual Duracells, Energizers, and AMZ Basics (I think rebranded Fujitsu) ones leak. All of which used to be pretty good. Reason I'm particularly ticked right now is they blew up in my multimeter I've had for ages and really liked, and now the units completely fried. I even took it apart to clean it all up, and yup. It's shot. Thanks, Costco. Ironically, the only ones I HAVEN'T ever had leak are those cheap Rayovacs (but those don't seem to last long), and Sony batteries which aren't the cheapest but haven't blown up on me either. I think I'm gonna buy Sonys from here on out.
You guys been having battery drama too lately?
Not sure about lately but definitely over the years. I should probably go check some of my less frequently used electronics. Unfortunately some things should have the batteries removed when not in use which is a pita, considering my multimeter has a screw securing the battery door. I had a pair of Smith Turbo Fan goggles get ruined this way. And I made it worse trying to clean the battery compartment so I didn't try to get them warrantied. I used them without the fan as they were still nice goggles. Then I left my helmet and goggles in the Jay Peak cafeteria and somebody scored the whole package out of lost and found. Which was annoying. We also lost a DVD remote in the last year to this issue. It seems to happen on our less frequently used items.
EXACTLY. Really annoying for stuff with a stupid screw for the battery compartments. Maybe I need to pony up for some high quality lithiums for my next multimeter. Still annoyed I even HAVE to buy another, because it perfectly fine until this happened. They don't make my model any longer. Any suggestions? Lol.
Don't pee on the batteries; duh.
This has been mentioned before. Some people just seem to cause batteries to leak. I'm not one of them, can count the number of leaking batteries on one hand that has leprosy. Not even batteries left in beacons for 2+ years. Stupid lucky, I guess.
Enerloops are good for sure. I've never had any of them leak either. HOWEVER, the downside to them is every time I've used them in low-use devices, they're dead when I need them. So have to pop them on the charger for hours. That's the whole reason behind good old fashioned alkalines. They tend to do the best with long term storage I think. Except when they blow up in your stuff. I'd say its due to high temps, high humidity, and being stored in the device, but I've had them leak in the packaging too so that's no guarantee either. I think manufacturing's gone downhill is all.
I've posted about leaking batteries in this thread a few times. Kirkland ones have been the worst. Never buying those again. A few issues with Energizer but not as frequent.
Ironically the only batteries I've never had an issue with are the cheapies that come with remote controls and other devices.
Lithium batteries might be the way to go for devices that only see sporadic use. They last a long time and don't fade, and shouldn't leak. More expensive, but you aren't saving $$$ by spending less on batteries that end up ruining the device they are in.
Are you talking about lithium rechargeable or lithium single use? Is the latter a thing?