That was my question the other day. I can see it for the walk-up atms but the drive-up ones don’t make any sense at all. That is taking political correctness a bit too far for me. Banks are scared to death that they might be accused of discriminatiion. i worked for a huge nationally know bank and one year at Christmas, we were told we could not put up anything pertaining to Christmas, no decorations, no trees, etc. Because that might offend someone. It is totally ridiculous References :
This question has been asked and answered many times before, which means that you have a kind of blindness.
ATMs are installed many different places. It is cheaper to manufacture one kind of ATM that can go any place, than have a different one where blind people rarely go.
You could have a passenger in car who is blind.
Some day blind people will be drinving, after SMART CAR highways are perfected in all nations. References :
Keypads from all the major ATM manufacturers have to conform to many standards, including PIN security standards from Visa and Mastercard, as well as ADA compliance standards in regards to handicapped accessability. In order to cut manufacturing costs, they don’t not include braille on drive thru models. It wouldn’t make sense to have two assemblies, not would it? I mean truely, are you going to save that much money by excluding the little plastic bumps?
Bottomline is: You don’t create different keypad assemblies for different installations unless you absolutly have to. If the world can live with one standard assembly, then that’s the one that gets put in ALL their machines. References : 4 years experience in the ATM service and installation industry
February 2nd, 2010 at 5:11 pm
no but they do have bank accts
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February 2nd, 2010 at 5:53 pm
I had to wonder about that one myself.
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February 2nd, 2010 at 6:13 pm
Not all ATM’s are drive through
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February 2nd, 2010 at 6:54 pm
not all ATM’s are "drivethru" ATMs and im sure they only make one type of ATM for all the locations that they are placed.
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February 2nd, 2010 at 7:18 pm
That was my question the other day. I can see it for the walk-up atms but the drive-up ones don’t make any sense at all. That is taking political correctness a bit too far for me. Banks are scared to death that they might be accused of discriminatiion. i worked for a huge nationally know bank and one year at Christmas, we were told we could not put up anything pertaining to Christmas, no decorations, no trees, etc. Because that might offend someone. It is totally ridiculous
References :
February 2nd, 2010 at 7:51 pm
This question has been asked and answered many times before, which means that you have a kind of blindness.
ATMs are installed many different places. It is cheaper to manufacture one kind of ATM that can go any place, than have a different one where blind people rarely go.
You could have a passenger in car who is blind.
Some day blind people will be drinving, after SMART CAR highways are perfected in all nations.
References :
February 2nd, 2010 at 8:01 pm
They use a standard keypad that is commercially available. It’s not special for ATMs.
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p.s. It’s Braille
February 2nd, 2010 at 8:12 pm
It is a built in standard now.
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February 2nd, 2010 at 8:41 pm
Keypads from all the major ATM manufacturers have to conform to many standards, including PIN security standards from Visa and Mastercard, as well as ADA compliance standards in regards to handicapped accessability. In order to cut manufacturing costs, they don’t not include braille on drive thru models. It wouldn’t make sense to have two assemblies, not would it? I mean truely, are you going to save that much money by excluding the little plastic bumps?
Bottomline is: You don’t create different keypad assemblies for different installations unless you absolutly have to. If the world can live with one standard assembly, then that’s the one that gets put in ALL their machines.
References :
4 years experience in the ATM service and installation industry