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Damn this needs building for the UK payphones there are a dying breed too and they used to be everywhere


In Germany some of the booths were converted into public libraries, those that people use to freely exchange books.

They are rare, but I have already spot some in the wild.


yeh UK went from 100,000+ now i think theres 20,000 left half of those i bet dont work


We actually ran something similar in the UK a couple of years ago but had to shut it down due high costs.

However we recently figured out how to do it in a way that won't bankrupt us, so keep your eyes peeled over the next few weeks...

https://payphone.team


Its insane how theyve managed to put that much waste into that space without anyone noticing it until now.

If it is organised crime then they must have rolled up with 4-5 trucks to dump this at once and the fact that its not been traced yet is insane


Yeh its telling when his mother said at the end if chatgpt loved him why hasnt it sent a message since his death.


AI responses literally reminds me of that episode of family guy where he sucks up to peter after his promotion

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ZcKShvm1RU


LLMs regrettably don't self-recognize the contradiction our robot did.


Yeh stick death definitely was before Xiao Xiao. I remember all the lads at school sat around a computer in school binge watching them all.


it literally is this. Nothing to do with Microsoft, it's youtube relying on AI to take down videos now


Seems very plausible. Still, you wonder why it got flagged.


possible confusion with pirating software i guess


"Aaaaaaaand were walking"


Scale is important here. On this example you see satellites coming in close to each other and even clipping.

In reality theyre so small that it makes this look 100x worse than it actually is


yeh when playing cities skyline i am always traffic managing it seems to be my biggest job to always have 0 traffic in my cities im guessing it boils down to the fact i hate traffic


Even shops with security guards dont work in the UK at the moment. It's a shame this could never be a thing here.


It's tempting to see security guards as a basic response to criminal behaviour. But I wonder if the causality is more complex than that. I can easily imagine growing up under different circumstances to view society as a case of "me" vs "them", and I'd be more inclined to lift from shops run by people who clearly see me as enough of a low-life that they'd pay some thugs to man-handle me out.


I live in a city where self-checkout was implemented for bus rides.

You still had a chance for a random bus inspection, but generally you can just walk into the bus and not pay anything, then walk out.

It was so strange at first, to see everyone paying when there was no authority demanding a payment.

Knowing that government trusts people around me to behave like good citizens, and knowing how many people actually follow the rules, definitely helped me to feel safer in the city.

15 years ago you had to put your wallet in the inner pocket because bags and outer pockets routinely got slashed. Now I can leave my bag on a bench. This difference got erased only when economy became more stable, and employment went up.

But I didn't know that I could leave my bag on a bench before I saw with my own eyes that almost everyone tries to be a good citizen. Even if there is no punishment and a small reward for behaving badly


"15 years ago you had to put your wallet in the inner pocket because bags and outer pockets routinely got slashed."

It's decades since I backpacked around Europe on trains and such, and back then slashing pockets and bags was rife. I never traveled anywhere unless I was wearing a money belt strapped to my waist—it held my passport, traveler's checks, large denomination notes and credit cards. I kept my wallet (with only a small amount of cash) in my front jeans pockets—I reckoned that down there I'd notice any slashing pretty quickly. Pants with side pockets were a no-no because they were too easy to pickpocket.

I recall one particularly bad incident in Italy of being surrounded by organised mobs of kids who'd act in ways to distract one's attention whilst others tried to pickpocket one's valuables. I came out unscathed because I was wary from the start.

Later I was living and working in Europe and it was very obvious to me that this sort of crime is much more prevalent in areas where people are unemployed or where there is a great disparity between rich and poor. I've no doubt the solution to such crime is having a society where the distribution of wealth is more equitable.

Re that point and yours about self-checkout for bus rides. That system was implemented a few years ago where I am. I've made the interesting observation that those who travel outside normal to-and-from work hours—say late morning and early afternoon—are the ones most likely to not swipe their travel card on the payment terminal. When I've traveled at those times I'm surprised at the numbers who do not pay. This is in stark contrast to those who are traveling to and from work, at those hours just about everyone pays.

Again, this, no doubt, is an equity/financial issue. Those traveling in the 'off hours' are more likely to be unemployed and or financially hard up.


As a counter point, when I came to UK, it was super weird to see self checkout machines. Where I am from (Pakistan), I can't imagine anything like that. Although watched a video recently where in a rural area a guy left a cart of fruits on the side of road for people to buy the fruits and pay by themselves, at the end of the day cash was just little bit less than total amount.

These machines in UK felt like I was being trusted to pick items myself, and pay myself and I shouldn't break that trust.

Ironically I don't see these self checkout machines in Indian/Turkish/Kurdish etc super stores. In-fact, those stores trust there customers even less, they would ask you to leave your bags/trolleys at the door.


You're on multiple cameras for most of the self-checkouts in the UK, with at least some both capturing your face and an overhead view that will trigger a "are you sure you scanned this" complete with replay of what looked to the system of you potentially failing to scan an item before putting it on the scales on the other end if it looks like you move something past the scanner without the scanner triggering.

The system will also typically signal for an attendant if you after a short amount of time ensures the weight on the receiving end matches the expected weight of the items scanned so far.

There's not all that much trust involved in it, and I think just being aware of the cameras will make most people who might be tempted think twice.

Of course it's possible to steal still, but it doesn't need to be perfect, it just needs the shrinkage to add up to a lower cost than having more people at the tills.


I think OP was afraid of making a mistake and stealing by accident.

I also don't like to use those systems if I have many hard to pack items. But at some point I guess you just remove humans completely.


They just save more money not hiring the cashier.


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