This is why you design the image yourself and not rely on acquiring images from outsiders.
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What's WRONG with the Euro
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The map (which cost $25 million to make, btw) consists of hundreds of spliced-together satelite images, all taken during perfect conditions. However, in the process several mistakes were made, small errors in colouring, etc. The mapmaker claims to be able to spot exactly the same small errors on the Euro notes.Världsstad - Dom lokala genrenas vän
Mick102, 102,3 Umeå, Måndagar 20-21
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Not that it makes much difference it the grand scheme of things anyway. I mean, how many people are going to go through all that trouble of getting a load of Thai coins, just to save themselves a few cents at a vending machine?
Things like this happen. For instance, some venders here in Britain can be fooled quite badly. If you get two 1-pence coins and stick them together correctly, sometimes you can fool venders into thinking that you just put a £1 coin in. Few people do it regularly though."Paul Hanson, you should give Gibraltar back to the Spanish" - Paiktis, dramatically over-estimating my influence in diplomatic circles.
Eyewerks - you know you want to visit. No really, you do. Go on, click me.
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One of our customers makes coin apparatus for slot machines. Everytime someone releases a new coin there are different coins that can fool it. It's not as bad as the old 5p being accepted as a 1 mark coin in all German slot machines.Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy.
We've got both kinds
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For the Americans, Canadians, Brits and anyone else who hasn't seen the Euro yet: the map of Europe on the notes is only an outline - there is zero geographical content in the map except for the shoreline, which I think is pretty well know. So I don't see how they can claim it is their map!
The article talks about how the plains of Spain are slightly too big, but since it is just an outline on the notes I have no idea how this is used to compare. (There is some shading but it looks just like random shading - as if someone has shaded it in with a pencil.)
If they spend $3m making an outline they deserve to be laughed at.
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Er, it's not just an outline. Look carefully and it's basically a two-colour, hi-contrast version of the satellite photo. It looks like it's filled in with random squiggles but apparently they are not.Världsstad - Dom lokala genrenas vän
Mick102, 102,3 Umeå, Måndagar 20-21
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The shading is not random. But it isn't the first such claim - some german bureaucrat claimed rights to the name "Euro"....
Also, the distribution of euro notes is a matter where the ECB should be under the European Court of Justice jurisdiction, not that of national courts. It's not entirely clear, but I'd think so on first glance....
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Originally posted by Snapcase
Er, it's not just an outline. Look carefully and it's basically a two-colour, hi-contrast version of the satellite photo. It looks like it's filled in with random squiggles but apparently they are not.
If you think that is high contast you need to buy yourself a new atlas!
Even if it were done from a satellite photo, how could you tell which satellite photo it was? ANY satellite photo would look the same (unless Europe's mountains move about ). For that matter, you could draw the mountains on by hand with as much accuracy as that map!
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Are they going to let Euro's circulate freely? Im curouis..
Say a traveler from the Vatican deposits his Euro's while on a trip to the germany. Will the Vatican Euro's be rounded up and sent back to the Vatican. I think you should let them move around freely. After a few years, you will have an awesome variety of Euro's .
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Originally posted by Locutus
(and if I'm not mistaken many vending machines have already been adapted, at least here in the Netherlands)...
The parking meters accepted 2 Eurocent coins (=4.4 Guilder cents) for 25 Guilder cent coins, hence: "Free" parking, w00h00!
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Originally posted by faded glory
Will the Vatican Euro's be rounded up and sent back to the Vatican. I think you should let them move around freely. After a few years, you will have an awesome variety of Euro's .
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Originally posted by Zopperoni
The parking meters accepted 2 Eurocent coins (=4.4 Guilder cents) for 25 Guilder cent coins, hence: "Free" parking, w00h00!
faded glory,
I think the idea is to let the Euros circulate more or less freely. Of course, even before the Euro came coins were taken out of circulation and replaced with new ones all the time. But I've already spotted the first Greek coins here in the Netherlands so I think having 8+ different 'nationalities' in your wallet (I currently have 3 myself: Dutch, German, French ) won't be very exceptional a few months/years from now
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