New Euro Coin Released With MultiView Effect
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."
Wow. Adobe's going to have a hard time with this one.
Wait a sec... whose side ARE they on?
-- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
...but I wonder whether it will look as good once the ridges wear down. Sharp edges on coins get worn pretty smooth after a while.
Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges.
Those crazy communists, how will American corporations implement currency copying protections if they ask us to help them fight counte... what is the current exchange rate on their money again?
./revolution
Wow. I can't think of one funny or smartassed thing to say about this. This has to be coolest coin tech to come out in years.
How long until someone imprints goatse into the third visual phase of the coin as a prank?
At first, I was thinking that "the Royal Dutch Mint" was a near-scam outfit like our homegrown Franklin Mint, churning out overpriced kitch like "The F-14 Tomcat Stars & Stripes" ($120 for a gaudy model airplane) and the $195 "Tribute to Leadership Commemorative Medal Collection", inspired by "President Reagan's most memorable speeches -- from his inaugural address to his moving farewell." 'Scuse me while I shudder in ph33r.
But as far as I can tell, these folks 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 -- unless someone's kid gets into Dad's coin collection again.
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
Now we can have Washington, Lincoln, and...um...Fillmore all on the same coin!
Goo goo g'joob.
90% off topic. I am going to Amsterdam at the end of March. What's the best way to convert to Euros from USD? Buy Euros at my bank in the US? Exchange once I get to the Netherlands?
;-)
Thanks in advance, and sorry again for off-topic.
PS: Any fun ideas/lodging suggestions, plz msg
Ecce Europa - Web Design for Business
I can see it now...
"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."
Heil Sig! -Rob
Imagine...take 10 Euros out of your pocket, and one of those images is MacDonalds, one Coca Cola, one Vodafone ;-)
-psy
Now we can start to mint those Clinton, Hillary, Monica coins right away!
"Cowardice in a race, as in an individual, is the unpardonable sin." --Teddy Roosevelt
Delete my account NOW please.
The Taiwanese 50 NT (1.50 USD) had this for years switching between the Arabic and Chinese numeral "50". And, it's not a collectors item, it's normal everyday currency. Sorry I don't have linkage or any more knowledge about the topic than this. Any takers on explaining?
where can I get one?
Wonder if it rubs off. Remember the first AU plastic $10 notes? They rubbed off...
It's times like these I'm glad I live in a country that doesn't put useless royalty on its money. Are these people really so important to distribute their pictures on currency? Maybe I'm just a traditionalist when it comes to money, but you should be putting important people who've contributed to the society on money, not royalty.
AccountKiller
It would have been much nicer if they put that effect on the coin's value. You look from one angle, you have a 5 Euro coin, you look from another angle, you have a 50 Euro coin, etc. Shops would then accept regular coins and angles of MultiView coins. You show your coin at 60 degrees, the seller takes it and returns it to you at 30 degrees :). Wouldn't that be sweet ?
This story will give you an idea of the high employee standards at Taco Bell.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
I can't say how frustrated I get when people put something on the web - which requires some special proprietary thing to view it.
"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]
As these websites will testify
http://www.depthography.com/
http://www.world3d.com/
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
The Dutch are prone to stuff like this.
:-)
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
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.
Is it ribbed for my protection or my pleasure?
Spain's 500 Pesetas coin had this one too, more than a decade ago. It depicted the Mint's mark or the year when flipped. So you could read "M" (Madrid Mint's mark) or "93" (1993) for example
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 pesetas around 12 (~15.00 USD)
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...
Usually, these special coins are made of silver, and the Royal Mint often creates a small number of 'extra beautiful' or gold coins, targeted at coin collectors.
A couple of months back, I paid a UPS delivery guy with a 5 Euro coin that was issued in honor of the 150th birthday of Vincent van Gogh, and there have been several 50 guilders coins in the past.
For many people, the birth of a princess was a very special and happy event, and the Royal Mint thought so too... :=))
Whats my $ worth now?
.........
Check your purchasing power, with our new coin docking station. Simply put your coin in the slot
and
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My hyperlinks aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
I wanna see an entire mountain done up this way.
Eat at Joe's.
7-bit ascii works fine. Just use html:
Sacagawea dollar.
Now a serious mumistmatist will tell me that King Louis the Very Small was on a french coin in 1712.
Using Mozilla 1.5 and xine, I streamed it just fine.
What's your beef then?
Maybe that's why dutch people seem to be mostly tall? :0)
There's already comments posted on how this is a lenticular technology.
More-or-less... lenticular media uses lenses to refract different areas of an image underneath to depict a particular image. You can still find these a lot in promotional materials, and even in some 3D display technologies.
Others have mentioned that this was already done on other coins. Also more-or-less. Those have always been two views as far as I can remember. Simply imagine a triangle - one side will have a slice from one picture, the other will have a slice from a different picture. Create an array of these and change the slice accordingly, and from one side you see image A, and the other side you see image B. Since you can only see one side at a time, this is very simple. It's so simple, in fact, that it has been used on speciality licorice.
However, this new commemorative coin depicts -three- views. As you may understand, this means that under any one angle, you should be able to see two sides of what basically amounts to a trapezium shape.
The trick is to make only one image be shown very strongly, rather than seeinig a blend between the two images.
If you watch the mpeg (! yay) you will see that the image really 'flips' and doesn't really blend (just a few frames where it is slightly ambiguous).
This is why it's innovative - it's doing something not quite as trivial as the existing technologies.