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  • Craig Walls

    Author of Spring in Action

    I've been scanning the early draft of OSGi R4.2, specifically RFC 124, "A Compo more»

  • John Heintz

    Principal Consultant with New Aspects of Software

    In a recent discussion interview questions came up, here's my favorite one.To set some context this question is designed to gauge the abst more»

  • Scott Leberknight

    Chief Architect at Near Infinity

    In almost every application I've done, the database tables have some kind of audit trail fields. Sometimes this is a separate "audit log"... more»

  • Alex Miller

    Sr. Engineer with Terracotta Inc.

    It’s time again for my monthly music club mix. This month is a bit of indulgent power pop and just a smattering of stuff I’ve... more»

  • Nathaniel Schutta

    Author, speaker, software engineer focused on user interface design.

    Recently, I sat through some vendor presentations and while I won’t name names, I just have to say: learn to give better talks. If I... more»

  • Stuart Halloway

    CEO of Relevance

    This is Part Three of a series of articles on Java.next. In Part Three, I will explore how the Java.next languages (JRuby, Groovy, Clo more»

  • Matt Raible

    Creator of AppFuse and author of Spring Live

    The developers of Seam have come up with a list of major issues with JSF. I'm assuming many more»

  • Jared Richardson

    Agile coach and co-author of Ship It

    The first scheduled class for the NFJS One venture is now official! And we don't even have the website live yet. :) This class will be a go... more»

  • Pratik Patel

    Enterprise Architect

    A fine fellow by the name of Srini came to my talk on JPA at the NoFl more»

  • Michael Nygard

    Agile technology leader and dynamicist

    A short while back, I did a brief series on the value of "d more»

  • Richard Haefel

    VP of Developer Relations, Curl Inc.

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  • Kenneth Kousen

    President of Kousen IT, Inc.

    A couple of weeks ago I participated in a BriefingsDirect podcast about using more»

  • Neal Ford

    Application Architect at ThoughtWorks, Inc.

    A while back, Richard Monson-Haelfel was working on a presentation called "10 Things Every Software Architect Should Know", which was a great... more»

  • Ted Neward

    Enterprise, Virtual Machine and Language Wonk

    As Joel points out, we've made a draft of the S more»

  • Jason Rudolph

    Author of Getting Started with Grails

    As we’ve seen over the last several weeks, it’s remarkably easy for code to earn the badge of 100% more»

  • Erik Doernenburg

    Principal Consultant @ Thoughtworks

    The Spring framework has become ubiquitous in the Java world, and there are a large number of to more»

  • Mike Levin

    Software Developer specializing in Web2.0 websites

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  • Ryan Shriver

    Business and Technology Consulting

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  • Mark Johnson

    Director of Consulting at CGI

    At the Columbus NFJS show held on July 25-27th during one of the BOF sessions Dave Bock, Scott Davis and I discussed unit tests vs functional... more»

  • Joseph Nusairat

    Author of Beginning JBoss Seam & Co-Author of Beginning Groovy & Grails

    Well i am assuming Apress has the most random site in the world at times.But today only they have our recent book, Beginning Groovy & Grai more»

  • Venkat Subramaniam

    Founder of Agile Developer, Inc.

    I received a copy of "Beginning Groovy and Grails—From Novice to Professional" book by Apress written by more»

  • Andrew Glover

    Co-author of "Continuous Integration"

    Web Component Testing Screencast- my friend Rod Coffin demonstrates some interesting aspects re more»

  • Jeff Brown

    G2One Director Of North American Operations - Groovy and Grails Developer

    We are really excited to have a 3 day Groovy/Grails training event coming up in Chicago later this month. The training dates are August... more»

  • Brian Pontarelli

    Brian Pontarelli - founder of Inversoft

    I went to the 37 Signals event last night sponsored by CPB. The speake more»

  • Graeme Rocher

    Project Lead of the Grails Project & CTO of G2One

    I'll be giving a talk on the state of Grails at the London Groovy+Grails user group meeting on the 31st of July. more»

  • Keith Donald

    Lead of Spring Web and Creator of Spring Web Flow

    I am pleased to announce that Developing Rich Web Applications with Spring, a three-day bootcamp lead by SpringSource engineers on web... more»

  • Pramod Sadalage

    Co-author of "Refactoring Databases:Evolutionary Database Development"

    When creating a Foreign Key constraint on the database as shown below ALTER TABLE BOOK ADD (CONSTRAINT FK_BOOK_ more»

  • Vladimir Vivien

    Software Engineer / Consultant

    Judging from the list of features that will be included in NetBeans 6.5, more»

  • David Bock

    Principal Consultant, CodeSherpas Inc.

    I just spent this weekend speaking at the Ag ile IT Exchange conference i more»

  • Kirk Knoernschild

    Software Developer & Mentor

    I’ve published a summary of the OSGi survey results on the APS blog more»

  • Brian Goetz

    Author of Java Concurrency in Practice

    This surprised the heck out of me.  We recently finished a new TV room down in the basement.  We have a 50″ plasma TV, mounted on the... more»

  • Jason Harwig

    Senior Software Engineer at Near Infinity

    I was reading a blog entry at more»

  • Pete Behrens

    Organizational Agility Coach

    Marti nig & Associates Methods & Tools group recentl more»

  • Brian Sam-Bodden

    Java author, Ruby geek and Open Source Advocate

    In this installment we are going to build the Dashboard page of the Tempo application. T more»

  • Mark Fisher

    Spring Integration Lead

    In my recent post, I had mentio more»

  • Ron Bodkin

    Chief Software Architect, Quantcast

    I'm looking forward to speaking at The Rich Web Experience conference in San Jose next month. The event runs from September 7th through 9th.... more»

  • Mark Goodwin

    Web Application Security Specialist

    We've already looked at one of the two big problems posed by anti DNS pinning on Java applets; because there's rebinding on the applet and... more»

  • Scott Davis

    Author of "Groovy Recipes" & TDD Expert

    Every time I see a live show at the Denver Botanic more»

  • Romain Guy

    Java User Interface expert.

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  • Ramnivas Laddad

    Author of AspectJ in Action, Principal at SpringSource

    InfoQ.com has published my AOP myths and realities talk recorded at a No Fluff Just Stuff conference. InfoQ.com founded by Floyd Marine more»

  • David Geary

    Author of Graphic Java and co-author of Core JSF

    The 2006 NFJS tour kicked off t more»

  • Howard Lewis Ship

    Creator of Tapestry and HiveMind

    <p>Tapestry 5 includes its own internal Inversion of Control container. This is often a point of contention ... why not just use <a... more»

  • Kito Mann

    Editor-in-chief of JSF Central and the author of JSF in Action

    A priority grouped list of more major issues that require extensive design and discussion.... more»

  • Jason Hunter

    Author of Java Servlet Programming

    I just posted the JDOM 1.1 release for download. This release includes about 20 improvements and bug fixes. more»

Creeping Fees

Posted by: Michael Nygard on 06/25/2008

A couple of years ago, the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport introduced self-pay parking gates. Scan a credit card on the way in and on the way out, and it just debits the card. This obviously saves money on parking attendants, and it's pretty convenient for parkers.

At first, to encourage adoption, they offered a discount of $2 per day. Every time you'd approach the entry, a friendly voice from a Douglas Adams novel would ask, "Would you like to save $2 per day on parking?" For general parking, that meant $14 instead of $16 per day.

Some time later, this switched from being an incentive for adopting the system to a penalty for avoiding it. How? They raised the rates by $2 per day. So now, the top rate if you use self-pay is back to $16. If you don't use it, then your top rate bumped up to $18. Clearly they put somebody from the banking industry in charge of this parking system.

Now, it's changed again, from $2 per day to $2 per transaction. So it's just $2 off the top of whatever your overall parking fees are.

This gradual creep is really interesting. I wonder what the next step will be. A $2 per year discount would be one way to approach it. Maybe a "frequent parker" program. More likely the discount will drop to $1 per transaction, or it will just be discarded altogether.

That's OK with me, because swiping the credit card is still more convenient than exchanging cash money with a human anyway.

Besides, back when it was cash based, I always got tagged with the ATM fee anyway. 


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About Michael Nygard

Michael strives to raise the bar and ease the pain for developers across the country. He shares his passion and energy for improvement with everyone he meets, sometimes even with their permission. Michael has spent the better part of 20 years learning what it means to be a professional programmer who cares about art, quality, and craft. He's always ready to spend time with other developers who are fully engaged and devoted to their work--the "wide awake" developers. On the flip side, he cannot abide apathy or wasted potential.

Michael has been a professional programmer and architect for nearly 20 years. During that time, he has delivered running systems to the U. S. Government, the military, banking, finance, agriculture, and retail industries. More often than not, Michael has lived with the systems he built. This experience with the real world of operations changed his views about software architecture and development forever.

He worked through the birth and infancy of a Tier 1 retail site and has often served as "roving troubleshooter" for other online businesses. These experiences give him a unique perspective on building software for high performance and high reliability in the face of an actively hostile environment.

Most recently, Michael wrote "Release It! Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software", a book that realizes many of his thoughts about building software that does more than just pass QA, it survives the real world. Michael previously wrote numerous articles and editorials, spoke at Comdex, and co-authored one of the early Java books.

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