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  2. Cummins Allison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cummins_Allison

    Cummins Allison Corp. is a company which creates currency handling and coin handling systems, including currency and coin counting machines. Its products are primarily used by banks and casinos for counting and sorting money. Cummins Allison was created in 1887 in Mount Prospect, Illinois.

  3. Automated cash handling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_cash_handling

    Automated cash handling refers to the process of dispensing, counting, and tracking cash within various business environments using software and hardware devices such as banknote processing. Automated cash handling is used by banks, retail stores, check-cashing outlets, payday loan/advance providers, casinos, and more. This process is ...

  4. Cash register - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cash_register

    Normally, an employee is watching over several such checkouts to prevent theft or exploitation of the machines' weaknesses (for example, intentional misidentification of expensive produce or dry goods). Payment on these machines is accepted by debit card/credit card, or cash via coin slot and bank note scanner. Store employees are also needed ...

  5. Currency-counting machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currency-counting_machine

    A typical counter of presorted coins uses a bowl with flat spinning disc at the bottom to distribute coins around the bowl perimeter. An opening in the edge of the bowl is only wide enough to accept one coin at a time. Coins either pass through a light-beam counter, or are pushed through a spring-loaded cam that only accepts one coin at a time.

  6. Coinstar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coinstar

    Coinstar, LLC (formerly Outerwall, Inc.) is an American company operating coin-cashing machines.. Coinstar's focus is the conversion of loose change into paper currency, donations, and gift cards via coin counter kiosks which deduct a fee for conversion of coins to banknotes; it processes $2.7 billion worth of coins annually as of 2019. [2]

  7. Jeton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeton

    Nuremberg jeton masters initially started by copying counters of their European neighbours, but by the mid 16th century they gained a monopoly by mass-producing cheaper jetons for commercial use. Later – "counter casting" being obsolete – production shifted to jetons for use in games and toys, sometimes copying more or less famous jetons ...