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Neill March 23rd 12 11:02 PM

Oyster Cards damaged by proximity door entry cards
 
My employer has recently issued us all with new identity cards as one
building, on another site I never visit, has had its entry system
changed from a swipe to a proximity entry system, similar to Oyster.
Apparently, a number of staff have suffered damage to their Oyster
cards, as they have placed them in wallets etc. next to these new ID
cards.
The guy I share an office with, a computer support guy who speaks in a
language I rarely understand, tells me this is normal for Oysters to
be corrupted in this way. He went onto tell me, that if you place two
Oyster cards together in a wallet, one or both of them will corrupt.
Proximity entry to buildings is becoming more normal, apparently a
several of cash-strapped universities and colleges in the London area
are swapping their systems as it is cheaper, no doubt other
organisations will in the future. As I don't need, an Oyster card, I'm
not that concerned, but this might be interesting to watch in the
future.

Neill

Adrian C March 24th 12 07:42 AM

Oyster Cards damaged by proximity door entry cards
 
On 24/03/2012 00:02, neill wrote:

The guy I share an office with, a computer support guy who speaks in a
language I rarely understand, tells me this is normal for Oysters to
be corrupted in this way.


Yes, you rarely understand - so he must be an expert.

There is a style writting guide somewhere - Snopes? - that shows how to
write a Hoax chain letter. Yours trips the BS detector pretty hard.

Better luck next time.

--
Adrian C


[email protected][_2_] March 24th 12 09:12 AM

Oyster Cards damaged by proximity door entry cards
 
On Mar 24, 12:02*am, neill wrote:
My employer has recently issued us all with new identity cards as one
building, on another site I never visit, has had its entry system
changed from a swipe to a proximity entry system, similar to *Oyster.
Apparently, a number of staff have suffered damage to their Oyster
cards, as they have placed them in wallets etc. next to these new ID
cards.
The guy I share an office with, a computer support guy who speaks in a
language I rarely understand, tells me this is normal *for Oysters to
be corrupted in this way. He went onto tell me, that if you place two
Oyster cards together in a wallet, one or both of them will corrupt.
Proximity entry to buildings is becoming more normal, apparently a
several of cash-strapped universities and colleges in the London area
are swapping their systems as it is cheaper, no doubt other
organisations will in the future. As I don't need, an Oyster card, I'm
not that concerned, but this might be interesting to watch in *the
future.

Neill


Hillingdon Council have issued a Resident's Card to everyone in the
Borough for use when paying Council Tax, borrowing library books,
getting local shop discounts, whatever. It is a proximity card. If
placed in the same wallet as an Oyster Card neither will work.
Hillingdon suggest keeping it well away from any Oyster (or similar
card). CJB.

Richard March 24th 12 09:57 AM

Oyster Cards damaged by proximity door entry cards
 
On Fri, 23 Mar 2012 17:02:34 -0700 (PDT), neill
wrote:

My employer has recently issued us all with new identity cards as one
building, on another site I never visit, has had its entry system
changed from a swipe to a proximity entry system, similar to Oyster.
Apparently, a number of staff have suffered damage to their Oyster
cards, as they have placed them in wallets etc. next to these new ID
cards.


They probably won't work when together in the same wallet but I can't
think of any way that a card could be damaged permanently. More
likely that it is bent slightly in the wallet, and the antenna breaks.

The guy I share an office with, a computer support guy who speaks in a
language I rarely understand, tells me this is normal for Oysters to
be corrupted in this way. He went onto tell me, that if you place two
Oyster cards together in a wallet, one or both of them will corrupt.


Perhaps he should stick to software!

Richard.

tim.... March 24th 12 12:50 PM

Oyster Cards damaged by proximity door entry cards
 

"Richard" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 23 Mar 2012 17:02:34 -0700 (PDT), neill
wrote:

My employer has recently issued us all with new identity cards as one
building, on another site I never visit, has had its entry system
changed from a swipe to a proximity entry system, similar to Oyster.
Apparently, a number of staff have suffered damage to their Oyster
cards, as they have placed them in wallets etc. next to these new ID
cards.


They probably won't work when together in the same wallet but I can't
think of any way that a card could be damaged permanently. More
likely that it is bent slightly in the wallet, and the antenna breaks.

The guy I share an office with, a computer support guy who speaks in a
language I rarely understand, tells me this is normal for Oysters to
be corrupted in this way. He went onto tell me, that if you place two
Oyster cards together in a wallet, one or both of them will corrupt.


Perhaps he should stick to software!


ISTM he should stick to playing with his wooden building bricks

tim



[email protected] March 24th 12 06:28 PM

Oyster Cards damaged by proximity door entry cards
 
On 24/03/2012 00:02, neill wrote:
My employer has recently issued us all with new identity cards as one
building, on another site I never visit, has had its entry system
changed from a swipe to a proximity entry system, similar to Oyster.
Apparently, a number of staff have suffered damage to their Oyster
cards, as they have placed them in wallets etc. next to these new ID
cards.
The guy I share an office with, a computer support guy who speaks in a
language I rarely understand, tells me this is normal for Oysters to
be corrupted in this way. He went onto tell me, that if you place two
Oyster cards together in a wallet, one or both of them will corrupt.
Proximity entry to buildings is becoming more normal, apparently a
several of cash-strapped universities and colleges in the London area
are swapping their systems as it is cheaper, no doubt other
organisations will in the future. As I don't need, an Oyster card, I'm
not that concerned, but this might be interesting to watch in the
future.

Neill


That is complete and utter nonsense. I keep a smart card from anoter
city and my Oystercard together in the same holder. Trying to tap in
with both of them in the same flap of the holder will just confuse the
reader, which will simply deny you entrance. Putting them in separate
flaps after they have been together will allow each one to work just
fine and neither of the cards have been corrupted in any way.


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