It's interesting reading this because it's clear that a lot of ways that companies operate are predicated on the idea how things should work rather than how they do.
For example. people talk about storing loyalty cards on a phone, so they're easier to carry around. It's fine in theory but I've gone back to physical cards as mobile data is so poor in this country, most of the time the cards were non-accessible. I also used to use my local library to print documents, mailing them to my Gmail account. But Google now uses 2FA every time I log on and, again, there's no mobile signal, so I have to use Hotmail (at least, until Microsoft uses 2FA and then I'm stuffed). Everything works on the assumption that there's voice and data services are universally available but they're not. I've just come back from a walking holiday in Yorkshire and, thankfully, had bought paper maps with me as most of the time, there's no signal anywhere!
And then there are the times when companies won't use technology. We're currently winding up my mum's estate and she had a lot of accounts with small amounts in them - a couple of hundred here, a couple of thousand there. Finance companies insist on sending us cheques rather than using BACS, which is a pain in itself but NatWest is shutting its Castle Sq branch shortly and the only branch that will be open will be in Hove. I'm hoping that all cheques arrrive before I have to schlep over there. It would make sense if you could cheques in on ATMs but the only ones that offer this are inside the branches - the ones that are closing down. Again, companies are operating on the assumption that there are bank branches everywhere.
Maybe things will improve with universal 5G or when 6G comes on stream but I'm not holding my breath.
(oh, and a pedant writes that a luddite isn't someone who can't use technology but someone who wants to see technology destroyed).
For example. people talk about storing loyalty cards on a phone, so they're easier to carry around. It's fine in theory but I've gone back to physical cards as mobile data is so poor in this country, most of the time the cards were non-accessible. I also used to use my local library to print documents, mailing them to my Gmail account. But Google now uses 2FA every time I log on and, again, there's no mobile signal, so I have to use Hotmail (at least, until Microsoft uses 2FA and then I'm stuffed). Everything works on the assumption that there's voice and data services are universally available but they're not. I've just come back from a walking holiday in Yorkshire and, thankfully, had bought paper maps with me as most of the time, there's no signal anywhere!
And then there are the times when companies won't use technology. We're currently winding up my mum's estate and she had a lot of accounts with small amounts in them - a couple of hundred here, a couple of thousand there. Finance companies insist on sending us cheques rather than using BACS, which is a pain in itself but NatWest is shutting its Castle Sq branch shortly and the only branch that will be open will be in Hove. I'm hoping that all cheques arrrive before I have to schlep over there. It would make sense if you could cheques in on ATMs but the only ones that offer this are inside the branches - the ones that are closing down. Again, companies are operating on the assumption that there are bank branches everywhere.
Maybe things will improve with universal 5G or when 6G comes on stream but I'm not holding my breath.
(oh, and a pedant writes that a luddite isn't someone who can't use technology but someone who wants to see technology destroyed).