Oh goody, just look how competition has driven down utility prices... I think it's An Post won't share their system for nothing, after spending the money developing it.
As above, it's available to anyone that wants to pay the licence fee! As I understand it An Post are actually in favour of it, as they see the short term gain of the increase in junk mail, and the management couldn't give a flying about the social role of the companyOriginally Posted by OneRedArmy
Have to say I'm happy with our service, both in delivery and the local post office. Our post goes to the wifes home place (our choice) (along with the inlaws) - they'd be post everyday but not necessarily for everyone. Bunching happens, so it's some conclusion that it means they're not doing daily deliveries. Any evidence, rather than a hunch? One things for sure, the service isn't going to get better if it was purely commercially driven - we'd probably be 15 miles from a post office, a couple of deliveries a week, no parcel service (you'd be told to pick it up).Originally Posted by OneRedArmy
As a general btw - the cost is going to be at least €20 million to develop a system. Still, it's not like we were cutting cancer vacinnes that cost half that or anything...
If you attack me with stupidity, I'll be forced to defend myself with sarcasm.
I love the quaint Irish rural way of..
Townsland,
Village,
County.
It's the one thing that's stayed the same with us for generations...
'Fascists dress in black and go round telling people what to do, where as priests.....'
There is no choice we have to go for postcodes. Every year on my birthday I receive no cards or presents. I ask my friends and family, and they all assure me that they put it in the post the week before. About 50% of those cards make it to me on a good year normally a couple of weeks afterwards, and almost none of the presents. There must be something wrong with the system, the same way there is with the buses (a similar story, but for a different thread).
That question was less stupid, though you asked it in a profoundly stupid way.
Help me, Arthur Murphy, you're my only hope!
Originally Posted by Dodge
Went to that site about the PON Codes, or PONC as they want to call them. Correct me if I am wrong, but is "ponc" not the Irish for "trouble"?
That question was less stupid, though you asked it in a profoundly stupid way.
Help me, Arthur Murphy, you're my only hope!
Originally Posted by Dodge
No, I think ponc is the Irish for "another daft wastage of public resources in recessionary times."
Seriously though, the only contexts I've come across ponc in Irish vernacular is in internet addresses when it means dot (like foot ponc ie for example), or as a crude translation of punk (like, "who the flip does that ponc think he is, coming in here, turning on his rubbish ponc music?").
You can't spell failure without FAI
AFAIK automation started in 2005 and the bulk of their mail is automatically sorted now. I think I saw it on telly, which is why I don't have stats, and I was surrpised at the time at their hit rate, the amount of mail sidelined for manual checking - by video - was very, very small.
http://pix.ie/widgets/generate/accou...000-F5F5FF.jpg
"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
85% for print? That's not great. Any source on that?
You can't spell failure without FAI
I was under the impression it was way higher than that, high nineties. And it was the handwriting recognition I was truly surprised by. Perhaps it was another sorting system, but I was sure it was Irish.
The figures I used were for the first OCR sorting machines installed in the Dublin mails centre with an early version of the software. One of the problems at that time was large mailers were still using 9 and 15 pin dot matrix printers.
As I finished working on that project in '96 I can only suggest there have been vast inprovements plus handwritten correspondence was dropping considerably year on year back then.
http://pix.ie/widgets/generate/accou...000-F5F5FF.jpg
"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
Oh, I thought you meant the current figures.
You can't spell failure without FAI
They had horrendous problems at the start, but sure that's par for the course with a state or semi-state technology rollout. The postal workers probably couldn't figure out where the pencils went.![]()
I actually thought it was higher than that. Where did you get that figure from?
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