cellio: (avatar-face)
[personal profile] cellio
Today, as I approached the checkout lines with a dozen bagels, my salad, and a few other things, I found myself wondering about the specification of "12 items or fewer". (Fewer! They actually said "fewer" instead of "less"!) I assume they do not mean 12 individual items no matter how packaged, else you could never go through with a case of pop or a bag of potato chips. So do they mean 12 scannable things, or 12 items at the smallest unit size sold? Would my dozen bagels be ok in a pre-packaged bag with a UPC symbol but not if the clerk had to type in "12 @ [price]"? Or is the fact that it generates a single line on the receipt what matters?

These thoughts brought to you by "total items: 20" on my receipt, a need to maintain my reputation as a pedant, a desire to test posting by email, and caffeine deficiency. :-)

(no subject)

Date: 2004-09-23 11:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tangerinpenguin.livejournal.com
a) In practice, they seem to mean "keep the number down, guys, though we won't look closely" and if they can get you to not show up with a full cart they're ahead of the game. Strictly, I've usually interpreted multiple instances of the same item (e.g. multiple fat-free yogurt containers, which is how it usually comes up for me) as multiple items, even though a properly trained cashier will key them in as "7 @ [price]" almost as quickly as one.

In other news, email posting succeeded, but (as you've likely noticed) produced two copies.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-09-23 12:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cahwyguy.livejournal.com
So, when posting via email, could you specify the icon, mood, and music?

Do they enforce the web-interface length limitation of some 4000 characters for email? I know they DO NOT for semagic submissions?

What happens to attachments? HTML vs. plain text posts?

I've always wondered what happens if you respond, via email, to one of those (you got a comment) messages.

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags