New Euro Coin Released With MultiView Effect 108
Jacco de Leeuw writes "Remember those postcards that showed different pictures depending on the angle you looked at them? Royal Dutch Mint has placed a new 10 Euro coin into circulation today that exhibits a similar effect. They invented a new minting technique called MultiView Minting. One side of the coin shows photos of the Dutch heir to the throne, his wife and their newborn daughter Amalia. The three pictures were lasered onto 46 ribs, which is the number of chromosomes in a human cell. This clip shows the effect."
Adobe (Score:5, Funny)
Wait a sec... whose side ARE they on?
Re:Adobe (Score:1)
Re:Adobe (Score:5, Funny)
Sure you can. It's passing them for real that's really hard.
Re:Adobe (Score:5, Funny)
Well, you can, but only the dumbest person at Taco Bell would take them.
Re:Adobe (Score:3, Funny)
Taco Bell and the $2 Bill (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Taco Bell and the $2 Bill (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Taco Bell and the $2 Bill (Score:1)
Anyway's the cops came laughed, and I also got my food for free.
That's kind of cool... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That's kind of cool... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:That's kind of cool... (Score:2)
I'm speechless (Score:3, Funny)
Let me help... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm speechless (Score:3, Funny)
Well, with 8 posts so far, three have managed to come up with something smartassed (funny has yet to be achieved) so it looks like you're lagging a little. Have you considered something along the lines of "But they'll have to pay SCO 699 Euros per coin for using their intellectual property!"?
Re:I'm speechless (Score:3, Interesting)
While I think it's really lame, I'm excited anyway. The EU lets each member state control only one side of the coin, the other is fixed. I see this as an opening shot. I look forward to the next member state that tries to do better than the Dutch. I like this better than when they used to kil
A real mint? (Score:5, Insightful)
But as far as I can tell, these folks [en.knm.nl] are the real thing -- they issue real money, *and* kitchy overpriced collectibles. Pretty cool. But it doesn't look like the three-image coins are going to turn up in the local arcade [pinballwizard.nl] -- unless someone's kid gets into Dad's coin collection again.
Re:A real mint? (Score:2)
Re:A real mint? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A real mint? (Score:3, Funny)
Two Mints in One! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Two Mints in One! (Score:3, Funny)
Hosers : )
Re:A real mint? (Score:2)
Re:A real mint? (Score:2, Funny)
For some reason, when I read "Royal Dutch Mint" all I can think of is chocolate-mint ice-cream.
Re:A real mint? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:A real mint? (Score:3, Insightful)
You must be new here. Welcome to Slashdot! Enjoy your visit.
Yep! Normal currency (Score:2, Informative)
They are legal currency, so if you get paid with it, shops and so on should accept these as normal money. Ofcourse most of these coins end up in storage boxes in peoples homes, never to be used again.
Re:A real mint? (Score:1)
Just imagine the American version... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just imagine the American version... (Score:2)
Hmm, I don't Don Regan was that important. Certainly no more so than other White House Chiefs of Staff.
Re:Just imagine the American version... (Score:1)
Washington, Lincoln, and Reagan. Don't wince; he fits right in. Washington,
despite his reputation as a military hero, was politically a Whig; today the
Whig party is known as the Republican party. Lincoln was officially the
Republican party's first elected candidate after the reorganisation, and the
more conservative parts of the party today (the fire-breathing Reaganites if
you will) hold views that are closer to those held by Washington and Lincoln
than
Bah, a multiview coin w/presidents is nothing (Score:2)
New Coin Boosts Dutch Economy... (Score:5, Funny)
"The Dutch Economy saw a sharp rebound today when space cake consumption more than tripled after the Royal Dutch Mint released "trippy" new coin design."
Next: advertizing! (Score:5, Funny)
-psy
Re:Next: advertizing! (Score:4, Interesting)
Italian 1000 lira notes were also used in strange ways, as they were not worth a lot (roughly 50 Euro cents), people used to scribble things on them, so you had currency with grocery lists, telephone numbers and doodles. Then again, telephone coins (200 liras) were nearly legal tender... [iltrogolo.it]
God, when will slashdot support unicode, so I can use the euro symbol...
Re:Next: advertizing! (Score:2)
Awsome (Score:5, Funny)
Taiwan 50 (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Taiwan 50 (Score:1)
I want one (Score:2)
Wonder if it rubs off. Remember the first AU plastic $10 notes? They rubbed off...
Re:I want one (Score:2)
In you are in an Euro country sometimes your local bank will get the 10 Euro coins in, or you can request that they get some for you, sometimes they can, but it may be harder to get a Netherland coin outside of the Netherland bank.
Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:1)
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:2, Insightful)
It's times like these I'm glad I live in a country that doesn't put useless royalty on its money.
At times like these, I think we have more important things to worry about than who's on our money, don't you?
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:1)
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:1)
They've made many contributions to Dutch society.
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:2)
Well, traditionally, for the lasr few thousand years, its been royalty on coins...
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:3, Interesting)
Babies on coins (Score:2)
Sacagawea dollar. [usmintquarters.com]
Now a serious mumistmatist will tell me that King Louis the Very Small was on a french coin in 1712.
Re:Cool technology, but ugh. (Score:1)
Dutch currency used to have stylized portraits of royalty on them, but not photo-like material like this one does.
From a technological standpoint, this coin is a very nice piece of work, but I for one would have been pleased with a different subject.
One idea would have been the outline of the country, the outine of europe and
MultiView value (Score:4, Funny)
Re:View latest value (Score:1)
Check your purchasing power, with our new coin docking station. Simply put your coin in the slot
and
buffering............
failed to connect to server.
Re:MultiView value (Score:1)
Thanks, Webmaster (Score:3, Informative)
I can't say how frustrated I get when people put something on the web - which requires some special proprietary thing to view it.
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
The site worked great. The first time.
These days, having something work is getting rarer and rarer, and when I find something that actually works the way it oughta work, maybe its time for me to make my appreciation public.
I load so many corporate sites these days that flat don't work... its getting so that I really hate going to a corporate site on the net, cause many get so anxious to blow off their technical superiority of having all the latest whiz-bang late
It's called "Lenticular" not "MultiView Effect" (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.depthography.com/
http://www.world3d.com/
Re:It's called "Lenticular" not "MultiView Effect" (Score:1, Insightful)
Those looney Dutch... (Score:5, Interesting)
Their paper money (before it was replaced by Euros) was the funkiest ever. Full color, groovy designs. Looked like techno party flyers to me. Take a look:
http://www.rgaros.nl/money/notes/index.html [rgaros.nl]
I once had a funny incident on italian railways when the train conductor refused to accept a 100 guilder banknote. He didn't believe me it was legitimate money (neither did three of his coworkers). It sure didn't help that the exchange rates table he had said 'Holland' and on the banknote it was 'Nederland'.
So I had to get out at the next train station.
The Netherlands is one sweet country.
Re:Those looney Dutch... (Score:2, Interesting)
When it came, I was really happy about it: easier shopping across the border (Germany is 10 km. away from where I live), less hassle during vacation abroad, easier payment to/from other Euro countries, and a big, strong currency (check Dollar-Euro rates lately). I still feel that way.
But the money & coins themselves: worthless! Okay, it'
Re:Those looney Dutch... (Score:1)
> were the LEAST happy after the switch to the Euro, in comparison with
> other Euro countries.
Okay, but how much common sense can you expect out of a people who live
below sea level within a stone's throw of the sea? I suspect they have to
be a little bit wild and crazy just to keep their sanity.
Re:Those looney Dutch... (Score:1)
Just like people live in the Northpole or something.
And anyway, living below sealevel is easy: just live. The dykes take care of the rest.
Re:below sea level (Score:1)
I have to know (Score:3, Funny)
Spains 500 Ptas coin had this one too... (Score:2, Interesting)
Later 2000 pesetas coins had that too, in limited series with complex drawings (although they costed exactly 2000 pesetas, they were sold in banks with no profit as they were legal tender just as every normal coin)
It was made to prevent currency falsification, as 500 pesetas were equivalent to 3 (~3.80 USD) and 2000 p
Re:Euro (Score:2)
Re:Euro (Score:1, Offtopic)
5 grams of hash 60 Euros
Mushroom Caps 12 euros, each
Prostitute, Blonde 100 euros for half hour
Having a trip to amsterdam you only remember from your creditcard statements: priceless
Some things, money can't buy. For everything else, there's MasterCard. Accepted everywhere. Even Rasta Baby's.
Re:Euro (Score:3, Informative)
BTW the prices you quote are a bit high.
Re:Euro (Score:1)
Re:Euro (Score:1, Informative)
Then I use credit cards as much as possible, but the rate you get can vary based on your bank, so you need to research that before you go.
I've had problems using ATMs on occasion in Europe, as have family and friends. Also once my wife had all her magnetic strips wiped somehow in travel, so she was happy to have cash until she could get a new card issued.
Re:Euro (Score:1)
Wow that was a long sentence.
Re:Euro (Score:1)
Yes, I also got more yen for the dollar at the airport in Osaka than I would have stateside (San Francisco, as the exchange at BWI wasn't open yet). Fortunately I'd been advised of this in advance.
I didn't change my leftover yen until I had been back a few weeks, had to go to an American Express office to do it only to find out that they would
Re:Euro (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Euro (Score:2)
Re:Socialist bastards! (Score:1)
Re:Socialist bastards! (Score:1)