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DickFarang

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Posts posted by DickFarang

  1. On ‎10‎/‎6‎/‎2018 at 1:48 PM, lapd said:

    That place is basically a forum for farang bar/restaurant owners and katoey lovers (who are definitely not bi/gay, just ask them).  Say anything bad about either and you tend to get banned.

     

    It seems to attract lots of wide eyed clueless newbies.

    I stopped posting on Pattaya Addicts several years ago.

    Their frustrated (mostly Australian) moderators seem to envy and even dislike expats.

    On Pattaya Gogos I also stopped contributing about a year ago, because of their cherry-picking attitude and their sometimes childish behavior.

    • Haha 1
  2. In practice 90 days becomes 91 days after a while as 90 is not a multiple of 7 and Immigration is closed in the weekends.

    If, for instance, your last visit was on a Monday, you should have to come back in a weekend, which is impossible.

    So, if you go back on Monday 13 weeks later, that will be after 91 days.

    Anyway as there is a tolerance of one week, in this case you could go from Monday to Friday.

    This way I have to do my “90 days” four times in 364 days, just short of a year.

    As to visa extensions, you can do them from a month in advance.

  3. On ‎6‎/‎27‎/‎2018 at 2:52 PM, BestB said:

    Pattaya addicts is not exactly

    the beacon or the source of reliable information .

     

    once again, there is no such a thing as guesthouse license.

     

    Ask AJ to post a scan of this license 

     

    what someone was possibly able to obtain is an exclusion.

     

    please stop spreading rumours without any hard proof from a sex monger site.

    Does Pattaya Addicts still exist ?

    They happen to have been down for at least three days.

  4. This is like a technological competition of wits.

    The banks install security devices on their plastic and online banking systems and the criminals invent ways to breach them. It continues to go round in a circle meaning that using plastic and online banking will always be a risk and can never be foolproof. Not only that but the banks will always try and defend their security systems claiming that they are invulnerable and that it must be the customers at fault rather than lose face and admit that their plastic card and online banking carries high risks. Anyone who is unfortunate enough to become a victim of crime via the plastic card and online banking systems will have to jump through hell and high water in order to prove that the banks systems are at fault and unsecured.

    In my opinion criminals that steal money via ATM, credit and debit cards and the online computer banking system are no different to those who would break into a bank, steal the cash and walk out with it and should be treated as such.

    I would never use online banking in Thailand and only use my ATM in the case of absolute emergencies. I have to use online banking for my foreign accounts and treat with great caution. I always scan my computer thoroughly prior to logging in to my online banking and only on my home computer. I also keep all my programmes up to date including my anti virus and spyware software.

    Best is also to always delete your cookies and browsing history at logoff, also at home.

  5. New 1155 hotline launched for foreigners
    BANGKOK: -- The Tourist Police Division has been ordered by the PM's Office to open 1155 hotline for receiving complaints of foreigners, Deputy Permanent Secretary for PM's Office Chamroen Yuttithamsakulsa said.
    The hotline will receive complaints on urgent issues and there will be interpreters to help police receive the complaints.
    nationlogo.jpg

    -- The Nation 2015-03-11

    The short tourist police number 1155 exists already for years.

  6. Gem

    The Farang guide was not Dutch, he was from Belgium.

    The police got a complaint from local tour guides. The violation was so blatant it couldn't be overlooked.

    Mostly the tour guides for Chinese tour groups are Thai (but the agency in China often sends a coordinator along - but they are the wranglers not guides or translators -they need the Thai guides for translation)

    I hear you.......but he was accused of being a tour guide when he was simply interpreting for the Tourists.

    The whole affair is rigged in a manor that the foreigner is criminalized by some small minded disgruntled local tour guides.

    Can any of the Thais fluently speak the mans language or the tourists language.....nope.

    Anyhow he broke a law that is hardly important and the only reason it was enforced was because local tour guides are unhappy and the police are opportunistic in such cases concerning foreigners.

    The police officer should have told the tour guides to take it up with the labor department......not the police department......but the police get involved because their thinking there may be some good money to be made, somehow or some way....especially if it involves a white foreigner......if you know what I mean.

    Cheers

    He admitted to being the tour guide then changed his story. Regardless, he admitted to breaking the law. Why are you blaming anyone but the Tourist working illegally?

    My personal experience with the police has been far more positive than negative here in Thailand.

    I am not defending him in that respect.

    Why are you defending the small minded actions of the tour guides and the police???...especially when the police should be occupied with far more important matters...while you know full well the police do not do anything unless there is something to be gained by the police.

    If the tour guides came around and threatened to beat up the foreign tour guide or did beat him up I can assure you there would be nothing done about that or so very little done to police those criminal actions as to be a joke.

    As I said before this is a labor related issue not a criminal issue so why are the police involved??

    Because...... the police are being used as a form of intimidation by the Thai tour guides who can not compete against this better service provided by a person who can accommodate a need where the Thais can not.

    And you more or less support this sort of police action because one foreigner is temporarily acting as a tour guide and or interpreter.

    Plus it would be interesting to know exactly how accountable the tour company involved will be for hiring the foreigner in the first place.

    I assume the local tour company is a Thai tour company...correct????

    If so, then just how accountable will they be relative to the foreigner taking all the blame...as usual.

    I surmise the end result of this will be all the more corruption evolving rather than address the issue sensibly in any number of ways....as is the usual way things develop here in Thailand.

    Why did the tour guide not apply for a proper work permit, just like English teachers should do too ?

    I have applied for a proper non-immigrant visa and for retirement extensions each year and they have never been denied.

  7. The Dutch are very smart people. Most speak some English and some speak it very well. It is possible the Belgian was able to communicate to the Dutch tourists in their own language better than the Thai guides can speak English. However, he broke the law and the law won.

    Wrong place, wrong time. Remember where you are!

    Good to know: Dutch is the first official language in Belgium, followed by French and German.

  8. <script type='text/javascript'>window.mod_pagespeed_start = Number(new Date());</script>

    Another 'innocent' person arrested?

    You asked about it twice, I'll answer you once.

    Yes, in my eyes he is innocent.

    I don't give a damn about work permits and requirements.

    He was offering a service that the Thais could not offer as none of them could probably speak Dutch.

    Many of you will condemn me for what I said but this is my opinion.

    He didn't commit a crime he just wanted to make a living.

    He who is without sin can cast the first stone now....................

    A criminal.

    Taking jobs away from fully fluent in Dutch Thai people.

    These fully fluent in Dutch Thai people that live in the area don't deserve to have this guy make Dutch tourist's holidays better while helping the local economy with their money.

    I guess you are not fluent in Dutch, but many Thai people are, in Belgium and most probably in the Netherlands too.
    At the Belgian Consulate in Bangkok there is at least one Thai female employee who speaks Dutch fluently.
    That being said, when I visited Indonesia many years ago, we had Dutch speaking local guides, in Jakarta, as well as in Yogyakarta.

  9. At Bangkok Bank, the cards with chips can ONLY be used at a BK Bank ATM and WILL NOT work abroad at all.

    You need to get a magnetic strip one.

    So will this mean you can only go to the card issuing bank, and can not access any Thai funds abroad via ATM ?

    It is extremely difficult to get a Thai bank to do a Intl wire transfer by the bay, money is one way in Thailand.

    Banks in other countries have been using chips for years.

    Here's what the Bangkok Bank website says about using its chipped debit card outside of Thailand.....guess this means you need to use an ATM that accepts chipped cards also, not just magnetic strip cards. Do you have the Bangkok Bank chipped card and have you tried it outside Thailand in an ATM that also accept chipped cards? If so, what country?

    • Withdraw cash safely: The card can be used at more than 8,500 Bangkok Bank ATMs nationwide. VISA EMV-enabled ATMs are also available in some countries abroad, so your money can be kept safe when you travel.

    In Europe (unlike the USA) all ATMs require chipped cards, but some still accept foreign magnetic strip cards.

  10. At Bangkok Bank, the cards with chips can ONLY be used at a BK Bank ATM and WILL NOT work abroad at all.

    You need to get a magnetic strip one.

    So will this mean you can only go to the card issuing bank, and can not access any Thai funds abroad via ATM ?

    It is extremely difficult to get a Thai bank to do a Intl wire transfer by the bay, money is one way in Thailand.

    Banks in other countries have been using chips for years.

    All European bank cards have both a chip and a magnetic strip nowadays and since the beginning of 2011 they are not accepted by Thai ATMs (Bangkok Bank included) unless you have obtained an explicit and temporary exemption from your European bank to use the magnetic strip.

    On the other hand some ATM’s in Europe still accept Thai bank cards (also Bangkok Bank included), albeit usually with the message “fallback to magnetic strip” on the ticket.

  11. I just bought a 2 baht bar in Pattaya. The posted selling price per baht was Baht 18700. Whenever I visit the shop they check the price using the mobile phone ... and yes sometimes they price I am charged is lower than the one in the window.

    2 x 18700 = Baht 37,400 and the total was Baht 38,000 because of the commission (or design charge or whatever you want to call it @ THB300 per baht for bars ... for some reason higher than for jewelry I believe). I have never had any problem selling the bars at the same shop or other shops in the area, although I don't sell much except awhile ago when the price was way up.

    I don't often buy gold in Bangkok, but there is still a per baht charge added to the price. Whether you want to call it commission or a design mark up, it's added on in every shop I've gone to and it's the same for farang or Thai customers.

    http://www.goldbarsworldwide.com/PDF/NB_1_BarsFromThailand.pdf

    Generally Thai goldsmiths charge a design fee of around $7 per baht of gold although it might be higher depending on the construction and design. There is not much scope for bargaining. You might get the price down a dollar for each baht you buy at most - hardly worth the effort! It is generally better value to buy at least 1 baht of gold, as there is a minimum charge for the design fee.

    http://gold.yabz.com/where_to_buy_gold.htm

    Bangkok Post typically publishes gold prices every morning as follows:

    “Gold prices up 100 baht

    The Gold Traders Association this morning announced buying prices at 18,480.04 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 18,750 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

    Selling prices were set at 19,250 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 18,850 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

    This means gold prices were up 100 baht from yesterday’s close.

    Buying prices yesterday closed at 18,373.92 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 18,650 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

    Selling prices closed at 19,150 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 18,750 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.”

    Prices are, however, varying during the day.

    When buying gold bars in places outside Bangkok Chinatown, say in Pattaya, you will be charged 200-300 baht more per baht-weight of gold.

    Common gold bars are 5 and 10 baht-weight of gold; for gold bars of one baht-weight of gold only, you will be charged about 200 baht more per baht-weight of gold.

    When selling back at the same gold shop, you will get the official buying price; in other gold shops some hundred baht less per baht-weight of gold.

    Always keep the invoice as a proof of where you bought the gold.

    All gold shops have precision scales and bars and ornaments (jewellery) are always weighed in your presence.

    In gold shops, ornaments (jewellery) are sold in multiples of baht-weight and half baht-weight.

    Elaborate ornaments (jewellery) can cost some hundred baht more per baht-weight of gold.

    • Like 1
  12. In Toledo (Ohio) I can buy gold in any number of colors, all the same karat.

    The color difference comes from the alloy, not the gold content.

    In Toledo (Ohio) I can buy gold in any number of colors, all the same karat.

    The color difference comes from the alloy, not the gold content.

    only in Toledo (Ohio) exists a secret procedure that can produce 24 karat gold in any number of colours tongue.png.pagespeed.ce.JwCxzAWj6x.png alt=tongue.png pagespeed_url_hash=3761137055 width=20 height=20>

    There are many Toledo’s in America (Northern, Central and Southern) and even one in the Philippines, but the original one is in Spain.

  13. So in lay and terms if the display was for example 18000 baht that would be for a baht, so roughly half an ounce. If I wanted a simple 1 oz curb necklace, I would pay 36000 baht? Or would all the jewellery in the shop be different prices dependent on what the owner thinks craftsmanship should be? Basically I am trying to arm myself with knowledge so that if he puts the jewellery in the scales and I see it's an ounce I know it should cost twice the cost of a baths worth that is in the window and listed in the exchange.

    Bangkok Post typically publishes gold prices every morning as follows:

    “Gold prices up 100 baht

    The Gold Traders Association this morning announced buying prices at 18,480.04 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 18,750 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

    Selling prices were set at 19,250 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 18,850 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

    This means gold prices were up 100 baht from yesterday’s close.

    Buying prices yesterday closed at 18,373.92 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 18,650 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

    Selling prices closed at 19,150 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 18,750 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.”

    Prices are, however, varying during the day.

    When buying gold bars in places outside Bangkok Chinatown, say in Pattaya, you will be charged 200-300 baht more per baht-weight of gold.

    Common gold bars are 5 and 10 baht-weight of gold; for gold bars of one baht-weight of gold only, you will be charged about 200 baht more per baht-weight of gold.

    When selling back at the same gold shop, you will get the official buying price of the day; in other gold shops some hundred baht less per baht-weight of gold.

    Always keep the invoice as a proof of where you bought the gold.

    All gold shops have precision scales and bars and ornaments (jewellery) are always weighed in your presence.

    In gold shops, ornaments (jewellery) are sold in multiples of half baht-weight.

    Elaborate ornaments (jewellery) can cost some hundred baht more per baht-weight of gold.

    • Like 1
  14. What I heard was that Thais don't like the color of non-Thai gold, that's all. But wasn't sure if that was generally true or if I just got one person's opinion. Don't remember where I heard it.

    there is no noticeable difference in colour between 23 and 24 karat but quite a difference between the usual non-asian jewelry 18k and 23 or 24k.

    Asian people, not only in Thailand, but also in Indonesia, can see the difference between 22 karat and 23 karat.

    Toledo (Spain) is famous for its jewellery in two gold “colours”: 22 karat next to 23 karat.

    Gold of 18 karat (or less) is not popular in Asia and you will not find it in gold shops, but in jewellery shops only.

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