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CityRail issued magnetic-stripe tickets (and until August 1993 new format non-magnetic-stripe paper tickets), including periodicals covering 7, 14, 28, 90 and 365-day periods. State Transit buses issued paper tickets for single fares, purchased on-board buses using cash with the bus drivers. Ten-trip magnetic-stripe tickets called TravelTen ...
Magnetic stripe airline boarding passes will be joining paper tickets in history museums, according to the director general of the airlines' worldwide trade association. They've been overtaken by ...
Magnetic stripe ticket, or loaded into an Oyster card: May 1983 Greater Stockholm: SL [22] SL-kort Smart card May 2022 Buses, Metro, rail, tram, ferries: Replaced the SL Access smart card system. Lombardy (Italian region) Regione Lombardia Io Viaggio Ovunque [23] Paper ticket / Magnet-Electronic paper ticket (SBME) / Smart Card (Io Viaggio) 2011
change the tickets on offer; diagnose faults; A significant advantage of the Avantix B8070 over the Ascom B8050 was the ability to handle credit card payments. Initially, this was by reading the magnetic stripe of the credit card, but this was updated to handle Chip and PIN cards with the addition of a Hypercom Chip and PIN card reader and pin pad.
A magnetic stripe system in the largest transit system in the USA Chicago: Ventra: The largest automated fare collection contract ever placed in North America. [14] San Francisco Bay Area: Clipper card: Contactless smart cards for public transport Bangladesh: SPass [15] Contactless smart cards in Bangladesh. Malaysia: Touch 'n Go
Once common on tickets and cardkeys the magnetic stripe is being phased out. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us ...
The theta symbol (θ) began to appear on APTIS tickets around late 1988, indicating that the magnetic strip on the reverse was encoded with data, allowing the ticket to operate the automatic barriers that were being installed at London Underground stations at the time. Such barriers are now in common use at National Rail stations as well.
APTIS issued impact printed tickets on credit-card sized card ticket stock, with a magnetic stripe on the centre of the reverse which could be encoded to operate ticket barriers; it could also use plain non-magnetic ticket stock. [1] APTIS could issue receipts for passengers paying by debit card or credit card. [1]