h a l f b a k e r yYou think: Aha! We go: ha, ha.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
I'm thinking of some sort of device (possibly a pulley system) which runs from the bar of your pub to your seat, where you can put a little note and your cash into a container which then gets sent to the bar.
The bar person can then pour your drink and put it in a glass (with a lid) and send it
back down the pulley system straight to your table....
[link]
|
|
In the Netherlands they have bar tables with metered beer taps, like a gas pump. Serve yourselves, pay before you leave. Probably would not work in the States for liability reasons. |
|
|
I don't care if it would work in the states. The problem I can see with the metered beer pump idea is people legging it without paying. I suppose it would be ok if you left your credit card behind the bar, although you'd end up so pissed you probably wouldn't be able to sign your name. Mind you, that's not a problem in my local, I just put my first initial and draw a squiggly line and they take that as good enough for them....:) |
|
|
Wait a minute... isn't that called a "wife"? (Sorry, I had that one remaining sexist joke left over from the 20th Century, and had to use it up.) |
|
|
In a bar, that's called the 'barmaid.' At home it was once called 'wife' or 'child.' |
|
|
Instead of a pulley system, maybe an model train, slightly
larger than HO scale, whose track ran around the
perimeter of the room at table level. Each car on the
train could be numbered and matched with a
corresponding table that also had a number. As the train
comes by, you put your order on your table's car. When it
comes around again, you look on that same car for your
drink. |
|
|
There are "sushi boat" bars that move little boats loaded with sushi past the eaters; you take whatever you like (a little plate at a time), and pay for your plates at the end of the evening. |
|
|
To the best of my knowledge, that principle hasn't yet been applied to alcoholic drinks in bars. I'm curious, but ony in a very bad "science experiment gone horribly wrong" way. |
|
|
I'm not sure about the sushi binger (I assume it's similar), but kaitenzushi in Japan works on this principle. You take what sushi you want from the conveyor belt. The plates are color-coded and you just pay for it all when you leave by presenting your plates. |
|
|
The best idea I've hear so far! This website is tres cool fool! I'm not an alcoholic yet, but this invention would help me on my way! Mine's a double bailys and coke - yuk! |
|
| |