jmlang@water.UUCP (05/25/87)
In article <334@umnstat.UUCP> weiss@umnstat.UUCP (Robert Weiss) writes: >One last complaint: (This belongs somewhere else, sorry) When I stand >up straight at most ATM's, I can't see the slot where the card comes >out. Thus, it is moderately easy to lose the card through >forgetfulness. I'm only 6 feet tall. Now as I get older, I'll get >shorter, so this problem should go away... assuming senility doesn't set in. Since most of the time, ATM's are used to withdraw money, there is a simple solution. At the Bank of Montreal ATM's, you have to retrieve the card out of the slot before the ATM gives you the requested money. If you want to do other transactions, it is best to keep the cash withdrawal to be the last one since pulling out the card closes the session. A little safety feature, (and to justify this message in this newsgroup), pulling the card out, except when the machines tells you to do so, is equivalent to an abort. During cash withdrawals, for instance, if you pull the card during the "thinking" stage where it is determined if you have a money, then the transcript comes out with "session aborted", and closes the session. I recently used my card at an interact machine, (that allows you to do transactions like withdrawals from your account, but using another banks machine). The thing is that my banks computers were down. The interact machine started the transaction, asked me for the PIN number, and told me that it could not complete the transaction after I had entered 2 out of 4 digits. Problems: the ATM had started accepting the PIN BEFORE it was determined that my bank was not communicating AND the error message was unable to complete transaction, NO REASON GIVEN. -- Je'ro^me M. Lang || jmlang@water.bitnet jmlang@water.uucp Dept of Applied Math || jmlang%water@waterloo.csnet U of Waterloo || jmlang%water%waterloo.csnet@csnet-relay.arpa
avery@puff.WISC.EDU (Aaron Avery) (05/31/87)
In article <962@water.UUCP>, jmlang@water.UUCP writes: > Since most of the time, ATM's are used to withdraw money, there is > a simple solution. At the Bank of Montreal ATM's, you have to > retrieve the card out of the slot before the ATM gives you the requested > money. If you want to do other transactions, it is best to > keep the cash withdrawal to be the last one since pulling out the > card closes the session. I recently left my card in a machine accidentally. I'm not sure if this is the case at all of the machines in town, as this is an old model which I seldom use, but if you leave your card in the slot after your transaction is completed, the machine will wait some small, reasonable number of seconds, and promptly swallow your card. People come around daily to retrieve confiscated (for various reasons) cards, and return them to your bank. I had my card back within a week. Also, the newest machines around here have an annoying, loud, intermittent beep whenever the machine expects you to do anything, including take your card. It's nearly impossible to leave your card there accidently, though the noise is annoying. Just adding to the current discussion, though there's not much relevence to the newsgroup. Aaron Avery ({seismo,caip,allegra,harvard,ihnp4}!uwvax!puff!avery) (avery@puff.wisc.edu)