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Space Money Invented For Space Tourists

Posted by Zonk on Fri Oct 05, 2007 03:01 PM
from the in-spaaaaaaaaaaaaaaace dept.
An anonymous reader writes "The foreign exchange company Travelex has invented a unit of currency designed to be used in space commerce, the Quasi Universal Intergalactic Denomination (QUID). The QUID is made of a space-qualified plastic, with round edges to prevent injuries in zero gravity. One QUID is equivalent to about 6.25 pounds, 12.50 dollars or 8.68 Euros. Of course, space currencies are already a staple of science fiction, with 'credits' being the most popular."
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  • Problem? (Score:5, Funny)

    by le0p (932717) * on Friday October 05 2007, @03:03PM (#20872607)
    Solution: Problem, where are you?
    • Re:Problem? (Score:5, Funny)

      by Chris Burke (6130) on Friday October 05 2007, @05:24PM (#20874327) Homepage
      Yeah, no kidding. And besides, I had to read the title like 5 times before I stopped parsing it as "Space MONKEY invented for Space Tourists", and while I didn't know how one "invents" a monkey, I did think this would be a great thing that space tourists would greatly appreciate.

      But just some money? Sounds more like gift shop tokens. If you can't use QUIDs to buy a Space Monkey, then I predict they will fail.
      • by no_pets (881013) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:48PM (#20873239)
        No kidding. It's only a matter of time before there are free trips to space -- with an (even more) expensive return ticket in addition to all of the nickel and dime (QUID?) expenses along the way. I bet an "I went to outer space and all I got was this T-shirt" novelty tee would get a cool million.
  • Round edges.... (Score:3, Informative)

    by SnoopJeDi (859765) <snoopjedi.gmail@com> on Friday October 05 2007, @03:03PM (#20872609)

    The QUID is made of a space-qualified plastic, with round edges to prevent injuries in zero gravity.


    What the hell is wrong with paper currency? 0g paper-cuts?

    That said, sounds frivolous and unimportant, albeit kind've a cool subject.
    • Re:Round edges.... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by icebrain (944107) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:06PM (#20872653)
      Paper's flammable (or at least, easier to light than plastic).

      My question is: how do you fight counterfeiters with plastic money? Seems like it would be relatively easy to fake, compared to metal or newer paper currencies?
    • Re:Round edges.... (Score:5, Informative)

      by jimstapleton (999106) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:07PM (#20872663) Journal
      That's one of his many errors, to my knowledge, I've yet to see a coin with a sharp edge. At least, not in the US.

      What kind of crack is the guy who said coins have sharp edges smoking? Or is their some country where they do have sharp-edged coins.

      Another? Oh, as for credit. There are these things called "bar codes" - believe it or not, they are not magnetic!
      • Re:Round edges.... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by HTH NE1 (675604) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:45PM (#20873195)
        Coins also are conductive, which could short out electronics if they float into a panel being serviced. They're also more likely to do damage if left floating when the vessel undergoes sudden acceleration whereas plastic can deform more readily.
      • by Red Flayer (890720) on Friday October 05 2007, @04:07PM (#20873505) Journal

        Or is their some country where they do have sharp-edged coins.
        Well, I always file down the edges of my dimes so that they are razor-sharp.

        This is to "reward" the shoddy customer service I sometimes get at the checkout lane.

        It has the added benefit of putting the offending cashier on disability for a while, so that I don't have to deal with them again for a few weeks until they heal.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        except that in spacecraft, small free-floating objects are choke hazards.
    • Re:Round edges.... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by norminator (784674) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:51PM (#20873277)

      The QUID is made of a space-qualified plastic, with round edges to prevent injuries in zero gravity.
      What the hell is wrong with paper currency? 0g paper-cuts?

      Actually, why do we need physical money in space at all anyway? Why not just have it be all electronic? Wouldn't this be the true space age, and we're still going to be relying on physical currency? It seems like having your money float away would be more of a problem in 0G than getting cut from sharp edges.
      • by rubycodez (864176) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:17PM (#20872807) Homepage
        the main problem with the space wire transfers is that every three to four days the wires get all wound up around the equator and if someone forgets to unwind and untangle them and fling the slack back out sometimes they'll even yank out the other end at the space stations. But there's another invention in the pipe called "space wireless" that'll help alot, traffic congestion can be avoided as long as everyone remembers to not just leave the defaults at "space lynksys" and "galactic channel 6".
  • local slang (Score:5, Funny)

    by User 956 (568564) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:05PM (#20872633) Homepage
    One QUID is equivalent to about 6.25 pounds

    So it's 6 quid per QUID? That sounds confusing.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    No sufficiently advanced spacefaring civilisation should be using currency. The presence of currency means the scarcity problem hasn't been solved by the civilisation, which means they are poor primitives not worth the bother of Contacting.
    • by User 956 (568564) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:07PM (#20872657) Homepage
      The presence of currency means the scarcity problem hasn't been solved by the civilisation, which means they are poor primitives not worth the bother of Contacting.

      And they probably don't have cool matching jumpsuits, either.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Holy missed Iain M. Banks reference, batman!

          Yeah, except even Banks had to invent kudos [wikipedia.org] so that an ancient, amazingly advanced race of gas giant inhabitants still had something to exchange for products and services...they didn't have money of course, being so advanced, so they used kudos instead..which worked amazingly like...money.

    • Regardless of what progress is made, then scarcity will ALWAYS be an issue. Even if you can convert energy directly to matter and vica-versa, there will always be a need to assign value to things. The only way money will cease to be useful is if there is no longer any interaction between people.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Don't forget "Time".

          In the real world, I charge money for my Time and Services. There's more to an economy that just raw resource availability.
    • by Applekid (993327) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:11PM (#20872725)
      So, in other words...

      1) Solve scarcity
      2) ???
      3) Not profit?

      I'm unsettled by this. Excuse me while go have my lobes stroked.
    • The presence of currency means the scarcity problem hasn't been solved by the civilisation, which means they are poor primitives not worth the bother of Contacting.

      The scarcity problem can never be solved so long as one person has or can create something unique that another person or more than one preson wants.

      That's more of a sign of culture than of poverty.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The presence of currency is not a sign of poverty/scarcity alone. Above all it is a sign of mortality and decay. Time is money- If I work one hour, I get one hour worth of pay. My time is worth something to me because I am mortal- if I would be immortal, I could invest huge amounts of time in learning how to grow all my own vegetables, how to build my own car, how to refine my own fuel etc. But like most people, I don't have enough time in my life to learn all of that, so I take the shortcut: I exchange my
    • I'll see your Star Trek-induced optimism, and raise you Greed is eternal
  • Bah. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 05 2007, @03:05PM (#20872641)
    Everyone knows the only true space money is the Interstellar Kredit. Go go ISK!
  • I'll take Lary Niven's Star currency.

    I miss known space.
  • FTA:

    Each of the orbiting planets will carry a number, like the serial numbers on notes, giving the disc a unique code thus allowing currency to be tracked and helping to prevent counterfeits.

    So.. who's going to start a website for tracking those Quids, like Where's George? [wheresgeorge.com] or EuroBillTracker [eurobilltracker.com]? Might be fun..

  • Credits (Score:5, Funny)

    by east coast (590680) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:10PM (#20872697)
    I sold some slaves to the Lesti system not too long ago for 98.2 credits per tonne. I'm now rated as a fugative and your QUIDs are worthless to me since they're only good in the Sol system.
    • Hi. I'm Officer Murgatroyd of Lave High. Your ship is carrying contraband. Pay a CR600 fine by midnight or your ship will be confiscated.

      [ ] Pay fine
      [ ] CR25 bribe
      [ ] CR50 bribe
      [ ] CR100 bribe
      [x] CR250 bribe
  • QUID? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Otter (3800) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:11PM (#20872711) Journal
    As long as you have the Q and the U, wouldn't "quatloo" be a more appropriate name?
  • Space-faring folk should go digital; even so, the whole concept is beyond ridiculous being that nobody beyond this planet is actually using this. Just stick with American Express.
  • by Sporkinum (655143) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:13PM (#20872749)
    I'll wager 15 quatloos that that QUID will never fly.
  • by hitchhacker (122525) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:14PM (#20872757) Homepage
    In fact there are three freely convertible currencies in the Galaxy, but none of them count. The Altarian Dollar has recently collapsed, the Flainian Pobble Bead is only exchangeable for other Flainian Pobble Beads, and the Triganic Pu has its own very special problems. It exchange rate of eight Ningis to one Pu is simple enough, but since Ningi is a triangular rubber coin six thousand eight hundred miles along each side, no one has ever collected enough to own one Pu. Nigis are not negotiable currency, because Galactibanks refuse to deal in fiddling small change. From this basic premise it is very simple to prove that the Galactibanks are also the product of a deranged imagination.

    -metric
  • One QUID is equivalent to about 6.25 pounds...

    Fortunately, when you're in orbit, it won't weigh anything... you'll still have to look out for the inertia though...

  • I can't be the only geek here annoyed by the casual use of intergalactic. We haven't even made one interplanetary trip yet, so interstellar is still far, far away, and intergalactic isn't even in the realm of conceivable projects!
  • Or what about Triganic Pu?

    After all the Galactic Bank doesn't deal in piddling small change.
  • Stupid Tags (Score:5, Funny)

    by pembo13 (770295) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:18PM (#20872835) Homepage
    Can we remove the tagging system? Or moderate the people who put the idiotic tags?
  • What's the mass? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by reality-bytes (119275) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:19PM (#20872841) Homepage
    If one of those 'QUIDS' has a mass of 10g and you want to take 10 'quid' with you on 'holiday'.

    That 10 'quid' (worth £62.50), if launced on the STS would cost £240 to get to LEO due to their additional mass.

    Therefore, if you used this new currency, to actually get that money (£62.50) on orbit would cost you over £300 extra.

    Disclaimer: E&OE, YMMV, IANARS, My ability to perform basic mathematics is inversely proportional to the amount of alcohol I have consumed.
  • by syrinx (106469) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:24PM (#20872923) Homepage
    It's only worthwhile if it's backed by something valuable, such as gold-pressed latinum.
  • by kitsunewarlock (971818) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:26PM (#20872969) Journal
    Psh. I was hoping we could exchange goods and services with things like youtube external links, myspace mass friend invites and wikipedia article additions...

    While I'm at it:

    Spacesuits: $1,200 each.
    Oxygen recharge: $3.22 per gallon.
    Farting in your space suit while you and your cheap-ass buddy share an airtank; priceless.

    There's somethings your national currency can't buy. For everything else, there's QUIDS.
  • by jellomizer (103300) * on Friday October 05 2007, @03:28PM (#20872995)
    This reminds me of Flooz an attempt to create a currency for the Internet, as an attempt to cross borders and such.... But the truth is people want their own money either US Dollar, Pound, Euro... They are not going to transfer it for one thing and back again... Especially with those pictures. Heck take paper curancy and put it in your wallet or keep a credit card in your wallet. It is safer there then a bunch of oddly shaped plastic things in your pocket in 0g.
  • by Sentry21 (8183) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:29PM (#20873003) Journal

    Monetary Units: None. In fact there are three freely convertible currencies in the Galaxy, but none of them count. The Altairian Dollar has recently collapsed, the Flainian Pobble Bead is only exchangable for other Flainian Pobble Beads, and the Trigantic Pu has its own very special problems. Its exchange rate of eight Nighis to one Pu is simple enough, but since a Ningi is a triangular rubber coin six thousand eight hundred miles along each side, no one has ever collected enough to own one Pu. Ningis are not negotiable currencies, because the Galactibanks refuse to deal in fiddling small change. From this basic premise it is very simple that Glactibanks are also the products of a deranged imagination.
  • What a shame (Score:4, Interesting)

    by John Meacham (1112) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:40PM (#20873143) Homepage
    They took the time to design a new monetary format and didn't even make it based on a Balanced Ternary [wikipedia.org] system. Balanced ternary cash would be quite nice, it would mean almost always having the exact change, you only need one coin of each denomination to ensure you can make change for any possible transaction among other nice qualities.
    • by BobGregg (89162) on Friday October 05 2007, @03:21PM (#20872881) Homepage
      >>Why not "credit"?!?

      Because it isn't a cool acronym. Cool acronyms always make things cooler. Just look at what "AJAX" did for - uh, AJAX.

      Easily remedied though:

      CALCULATED
      RATE of
      EXCHANGE
      DENOMINATION for
      INTERPLANETARY
      TRAVELERS

      There - CREDIT. That oughtta just about do it. Lot better than QUID, to be sure...
    • by neapolitan (1100101) on Friday October 05 2007, @04:00PM (#20873399)
      Dear Sir:

      Greetings from the Highest General of the Counsel of Intergalactic Planetary Commerce Exchange. I am Sir Zaphod Centauri, esteemed chairman of the Counsel of Planets. I have a business proposal for you that may be of most benefit to both of us. Forgive me for contacting you over subspace, but Colonel Zimrohn expressed you will be reliable, and I ask you to hold this in utmost confidence.

      On Stardate 92714.3, the King of the United Saturnalia perished unexpectedly in a teleportation tragedy. He left in our accounts sum of NINETY-TWO TRILLION SEVEN HUNDRED EIGHT BILLION Quasi Universal Intergalactic Demoniations (QUID) which can not be accessed except by a native of the Milky Way. As of now this money sits unclaimed in our starbank.

      I would like you to act as Earth fiduciary for this money. Please send your STARBANK number via encrypted link to me so that I may transfer this QUID to you. As agent for this transaction you will receive 10% of QUID in your account.

      Please contact me at your most urgent communication, only over encrypted subspace link.

      Yours sincerely,

      Zaphod Centauri
      • by Mr. Underbridge (666784) on Friday October 05 2007, @09:26PM (#20876075)
        Don't have an account myself, but I know an Englishman who might find your offer interesting. Name's Arthur - good chap but a little daft. Haven't seen him for ages myself; living in a cave last I saw. Not sure what his liquidity situation is.

        Regards,
        Ford