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    Got a call about a gig I've been put forward for, clientco refusing to pay even base market rate and looking to pay at least £100 less than what it should be, pimp asking me to reduce my base rate.
    "Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what's for lunch." - Orson Welles

    Norrahe's blog

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      Of course I said thanks but no!
      "Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what's for lunch." - Orson Welles

      Norrahe's blog

      Comment


        Originally posted by norrahe View Post
        Of course I said thanks but no!
        and rightly so

        Comment


          Originally posted by Bunk View Post


          No basking for you anymore Zeity.
          <shiver>

          Originally posted by Bunk View Post
          I don't know what that means
          4d 3/4 - four (old) pence three farthings.

          i.e. not a lot.

          A bit more than 3 1/2d though. (Thruppence ha'penny 3.5 old pennies).

          I'll be talking about half crowns before much longer (12.5p). They were nice coins.

          And 6d bits (6 penny bit, 2.5p).

          All abolished to make way for VAT and the dreaded EEC.

          Fecking Grocer Heath.

          Comment


            Originally posted by Bunk View Post
            I don't know what that means
            http://www.predecimal.com/images/farthing.jpg

            Four of those to an old penny.

            They were abolished in 1956 because they weren't worth anything*.

            File:1936 George V penny.jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

            One was always looking in one's change for 1933 pennies. Never found any though.

            File:Halfpenny (British pre-decimal coin).jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

            Ha'penny. Half a penny.


            *After 50 odd years of inflation, a farthing corresponds to roughly 1p.

            So they should abolish 1p coins to be consistent.

            Comment


              Originally posted by zeitghost View Post
              <shiver>



              4d 3/4 - four (old) pence three farthings.

              i.e. not a lot.

              A bit more than 3 1/2d though. (Thruppence ha'penny 3.5 old pennies).

              I'll be talking about half crowns before much longer (12.5p). They were nice coins.

              And 6d bits (6 penny bit, 2.5p).

              All abolished to make way for VAT and the dreaded EEC.

              Fecking Grocer Heath.
              I still don't understand. How can a 6 penny bit be 2.5p? Where do shillings fit in?

              It's a good thing they sorted this nonsense out before I was born

              Comment


                Originally posted by zeitghost View Post
                *After 50 odd years of inflation, a farthing corresponds to roughly 1p.

                So they should abolish 1p coins to be consistent.
                In Australia the smallest coins are 5 cents but items are still priced in 1 cent increments so they round them up or down. In theory it should all work out even but I always felt I was getting shafted

                Comment


                  Feck me, it's worse than I thought.

                  £1 in 1956 is worth £18.60 today.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Bunk View Post
                    I still don't understand. How can a 6 penny bit be 2.5p? Where do shillings fit in?

                    It's a good thing they sorted this nonsense out before I was born
                    Easy.

                    12d (old pennies) in a shilling (5p).

                    20 shillings in £1.

                    So 20 x 5p = 100p == £1 = 20 x 12d = 240d.

                    6d (sixpence) = 0.5 of a shilling = 0.5 x 5p = 2.5p.

                    Simples.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by Bunk View Post
                      In Australia the smallest coins are 5 cents but items are still priced in 1 cent increments so they round them up or down. In theory it should all work out even but I always felt I was getting shafted
                      Oz took the 10/- note as their new decimal currency, so there were 2 oz dollars to the pound.

                      I suppose that explains why the 5c coin is now the smallest.

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