That's not that new.
I've been waving my room card in lifts for at least ten years, if not more.
I've been waving my room card in lifts for at least ten years, if not more.
Re: Elevators
That's not that new. I've been waving my room card in lifts for at least ten years, if not more. |
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That's new
I went for an eye exam this week. I've finally got good vision coverage, and it would be nice to have a backup for these new glasses. Turns out it's been 5 years since I got them. And they're still my "new glasses". So yeah, a 10-year-old UI on elevators is still new. -- Drew |
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Was doing it in the late '90s.
It was required for access to some of the floors of the EPA building in downtown Seattle. Ceterum autem censeo pars Republican esse delendam. |
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New to me in hotels
Not new to me in the office complexes I worked in when I worked in Manhattan. New to at least a dozen people that I saw as I had to teach them over the 2 days. New enough to be surprising to many people. |
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One would think a lot of those people have also worked in office buildings.
They come to a hotel, get a plastic card for a key, step into the elevator and are a little surprised at first as nothing happens when they press a button... And it doesn't fucking immediately occur to them that they could try waving that plastic key card at the controls just like they've been doing at the office for years already? People are morons. -- Christian R. Conrad The Man Who Apparently Still Knows Fucking Everything Mail: Same username as at the top left of this post, at iki.fi |