The first 'cash point' automated teller machine (ATM) was installed in
Britain 40 years ago today.
The machine, installed by
Barclays
at its Enfield branch in London, did not use a plastic card to access accounts,
but instead used radioactive cheques impregnated with a small amount of Carbon
14.
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The first customer was
Reg
Varney, from the television show
On
the buses, who withdrew the maximum amount then allowed of £10.
"That was regarded then as quite enough for a wild weekend," ATM inventor
John
Shepherd-Barron told the
BBC.
"It struck me that there must be a way I could get my own money, anywhere in
the world or the UK. I hit on the idea of a chocolate bar dispenser, but
replacing chocolate with cash."
Shepherd-Barron said that, although the cheques were radioactive. he had
calculated that people would have to eat 136,000 of them to suffer any harm.
He decided on using a Pin for security after realising that he could easily
remember his six-digit army number.
But tests conducted on his wife found that the most she could reliably
remember was a four-digit number, so Shepherd-Barron standardised on that.
The
ATM
Industry Association estimates that there are over 1.5 million ATMs in
operation around the world today, including a terminal at
McMurdo
Station in Antarctica.
Shepherd-Barron was awarded an OBE for his invention in 2005.
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