• jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    24 days ago

    You would think it would be possible to just swap out the currency mechanism and not the entire machine. Seems like there’s an opportunity there somewhere…

    Alternately, get a bill exchanger. New bill goes in, old bill comes out.

    • jeffw@lemmy.world
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      24 days ago

      I was kinda surprised by the article since almost every vending machine I see takes credit cards. I’ve never used a vending machine in a Ramen shop though

      • aeronmelon@lemmy.world
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        24 days ago

        Most vending machines take IC (the NFC-style top-up cards that Japan also runs on), but ALL vending machines take cash.

        It should be possible to swap out the reader, but they might be built in such a way that the entire machine has to be taken away and cannot be serviced on-site for security’s sake. I have never seen anyone servicing a vending machine in public.

        This could be something that causes Japan to rethink its cash dependancy.

        • mbfalzar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 days ago

          Hey! I know it’s been a couple weeks but I figured I’d say that I went down to the lobby at 10am just now, and there’s two guys in there right now swapping out the cash reader. There’s the regular restocker doing his job and a second guy with one of the handheld firmware loader things, I’m not sure if it just needs a software change or if he needs to be there to swap the actual slot, but it does look swappable

    • Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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      24 days ago

      These machines probably run on floppy disks.

      In Japan tech is either cutting edge or ancient scrolls

    • Sphks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      24 days ago

      In Europe, we changed to the Euro not that long ago. I was a student and I used to use a shared laundry machine. It was the day before returning to school. I was barely alone in the dorms. Let’s do a laundry !

      The machines were updated to get euros. There was another machine just to change the coins, especially since the washing machines only took one kind of coin (20 cents).

      I put one fresh euro in the exchange machine, expecting to get 5 coins of 20 cents.

      Tching. Tching. Tching. Tching. Tching. <pause>… Tching. Tching. Tching. Tching. Tching. <pause>… Tching. Tching. Tching. Tching. Tching. <pause>…

      What ?! The machine was buggy and would not stop. I grabbed a hoodie to put the coins in it. Soon, it was not enough. After what seems to be an eternity I was there with around 50€ and kilos of coins.