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#51
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In uk.transport.london message
, Mon, 2 Aug 2010 17:23:57, Basil Jet posted: Since you're the post office, and you delivered the mail yesterday and the day before, you should know which Station Road has a Mr Jones in it, i.e. the person's name is a checksum. And what if the letter is to a Mr Jones who is visiting the family of his daughter Mrs Brush? -- (c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. Turnpike v6.05 IE 7. Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQish topics, acronyms, & links. Command-prompt MiniTrue is useful for viewing/searching/altering files. Free, DOS/Win/UNIX now 2.0.6; see URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/pc-links.htm. |
#52
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#53
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On 2010\08\03 19:54, Richard J. wrote:
Eric wrote on 03 August 2010 19:27:30 ... On 2010-08-03, Roland wrote: In messageeL6dnWfi1ubAy8rRnZ2dnUVZ8gSdnZ2d@giganews. com, at 18:35:57 on Mon, 2 Aug 2010, remarked: Try Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ. Postcodes define points for deliver of mail, not a large sprawl of buildings covering a large chunk of central Cambridge. When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. surname,suburb worked for us when I were a nipper, though mostly we put the road in, and later, a direction. Presumably your surname isn't Jones and you didn't live in Wales. Even the road wouldn't help much in some parts of Wales. My father-in-law during WW2 had an entire platoon of soldiers all named Jones. I don't know how he managed to keep up with them. |
#54
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On Tue, 3 Aug 2010 17:22:13 +0100, Dr J R Stockton
wrote: The postcode system ideally suits the postal authorities, and no-one else very much. If only that were true. The postcode system works beautifully with navigation and mapping. Perhaps you don't use these things. |
#55
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Arthur Figgis wrote:
The colleges each have their own postcodes, though Name, College, Cambridge is pretty much certain to work (unless there are two people with the same name there), and there will be a porter to collect whatever it is. I guess there might be a problem if you are getting a big heavy thing which needs to be delivered to a very specific place. Getting the 37kg parcel over the humpback bridge on the river on an unbraked trolley was fun... it almost fell in. Next time I found out the real postcode of the building it wanted to go to, even though it had no facilities to receive post. The system used to break with firms which couldn't cope with multiple names at one address, but hopefully that is generally fixed these days - one electronics firm used to send all orders to whoever had placed the first ever order from that address, so there would be messages circulating saying things like "whoever ordered the left-handed grommit from ACME, it's in my pigeon hole, from Fred Bloggs". Still happens. Usually the addressee is left off, so things are just addressed to 'XYZ College', and the porters have to figure which of 600 people it might belong to. Plenty of emails like this still fly around. Theo |
#56
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On 2010\08\04 09:59, Bruce wrote:
The postcode system works beautifully with navigation and mapping. Perhaps you don't use these things. No, the OS grid reference system works beautifully with navigation and mapping, as does the lat long system. The postcode system only works in these applications via a stonking great lookup table, whose ugliness the computer hides from you. |
#57
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On Wed, 04 Aug 2010 12:44:19 +0100, Basil Jet
wrote: On 2010\08\04 09:59, Bruce wrote: The postcode system works beautifully with navigation and mapping. Perhaps you don't use these things. No, the OS grid reference system works beautifully with navigation and mapping, as does the lat long system. The postcode system only works in these applications via a stonking great lookup table, whose ugliness the computer hides from you. If I can't see it, who cares? It really isn't important. What *is* important is that the system works extremely well. Some implementations are even better - my Garmin SatNav tells me which side of the road my destination address is on, and is uncannily accurate. My TomTom SatNav doesn't have that particular feature, but it is still extremely good - stonking great lookup tables or no. |
#58
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Arthur Figgis wrote:
Cambridge doesn't have a campus. Unless you are a dodgy looking tourist, in which case it is that way --- Cambridge as a whole no but the college I'm most familiar with (Churchill) feels rather campusy. The colleges each have their own postcodes, though Name, College, Cambridge is pretty much certain to work (unless there are two people with the same name there), and there will be a porter to collect whatever it is. I guess there might be a problem if you are getting a big heavy thing which needs to be delivered to a very specific place. I was thinking of things like laser printers and even reams of paper, where you might want it delivered to a specific entrance/building. These are the sort of things that might come via a courier who is less familiar with the set-up and likely to take a college wide post code literally. My undergraduate university was Kent, with colleges on a campus, and the post codes told to students often bore little relation to the ones on the database. (This also created a lot of problems for TV licences.) Compounding matters was a tendency for some of the more obscure sections to use building names that weren't very prominently displayed on the buildings themselves or on signs and it could be quite difficult to find out of the way places - the students' union (split across multiple buildings) saying things were happenng in "the Virginia Woolf building" was one of the worst. Some of the newer accomodation blocks are standalone creatures with no receptions at all and absolutely no way to contact anyone inside without both having mobile phones (far from universal when I started). |
#59
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In uk.transport.london message , Tue, 3
Aug 2010 08:57:08, Roland Perry posted: In message , at 18:35:57 on Mon, 2 Aug 2010, remarked: Try Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ. Postcodes define points for deliver of mail, not a large sprawl of buildings covering a large chunk of central Cambridge. When I was in Cambridge, I used a very short address that worked every time. (Sidney Sussex, Cambridge). I've never had the opportunity to have such a short address again. That could cause problems with an item posted in Massachusetts. Especially as there appears to be a Sidney Sussex College in New York, New York. -- (c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. Turnpike v6.05. Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - w. FAQish topics, links, acronyms PAS EXE etc : URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/programs/ - see 00index.htm Dates - miscdate.htm estrdate.htm js-dates.htm pas-time.htm critdate.htm etc. |
#60
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