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    Residents can say whether they want WBC to renew its ?car cruising? Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) for three more years in Wokingham Borough. Picture: WBC

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    Residents can say whether they want WBC to renew its ?car cruising? Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) for three more years in Wokingham Borough. Picture: WBC

    Do residents want to renew car cruising protection order?

    The Sainsbury Singers presents Bad Girls the Musical at the Wilde Theatre this month. Pictures courtesy of The Sainsbury Singers

    It would be a crime to miss Bad Girls The Musical at South Hill Park

    Sunday services at Finchampstead Baptist Church take place at the FBC Centre, at 10.30am. Picture courtesy of FBC

    Church Notes: Deep is not being able to touch the bottom

    Fixers at Woodley Repair Cafe celebrated a year of landfill rescues. Picture: Woodley Repair Cafe

    Naturally Speaking: Woodley Repair Cafe celebrates 700 saved items

    Cockpit Path car park in wokingham. Pic: Andrew Batt.

    No free parking for town centre events

    Wokingham Theatre is blessed with a remarkable construction team. Pictures: Emma Merchant

    Wokingham Theatre builders: A ‘bunch of happy bodgers’

    Marc Brunel-Walker, centre, with Stephen Conway, the leader of Wokingham Borough Council, left, and Clive Jones, the Liberal Democrat MP for Wokingham. Credit: Wokingham Liberal Democrats.

    Councillor remains committed despite move

    St Sebastian's C of E Primary and Nursery Schools were excited to welcome Bishop Mary Gregory. Picture: St Sebastian's Schools

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    Hospital Radio Reading at Lowther Road. Pic: Andrew Batt.

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    Sunday services at Finchampstead Baptist Church take place at the FBC Centre, at 10.30am. Picture courtesy of FBC

    Church Notes: Deep is not being able to touch the bottom

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    Naturally Speaking: Woodley Repair Cafe celebrates 700 saved items

    Wokingham Theatre is blessed with a remarkable construction team. Pictures: Emma Merchant

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    This week Kerry Godliman returns to Reading's Hexagon with the second leg of her latest stand-up show, Bandwidth.

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    Audiences can see Mozart's The Magic Flute, performed by Park Opera, at Wokingham's Whitty Theatre at the end of October. Picture: A Different Perspective via Pixabay

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Home Opinion

ANOTHER VIEW: The digital divide when it comes to paying for parking

by Neil Coupe
February 3, 2024
in Opinion
A parking meter in Reading Picture: Phil Creighton

A parking meter in Reading Picture: Phil Creighton

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By Neil Coupe

Over the weekend, I was listening to an interesting podcast where ex-Prime Minister Tony Blair and ex-Leader of the Opposition William Hague were discussing the advances in technology and how they are going to be transformational in the coming years and decades.

It was an enjoyable listen. They began by chuckling about their old ‘war stories’, such as when during Prime Ministers Questions Hague asked Blair about a new Sports Centre in Sheffield that had been boasted about in a Government press release, only for it to turn out that it had not even been started, never mind completed.

Hague then sighed as he reflected that his supposed success at the despatch box did not translate to the ballot box.

They then explored how technology is continuing to transform society and talked about how, for example, work between a hospital group and a world-famous technology company had created a process whereby retinal scans could identify the very first signs of Parkinson’s Disease.

If identified early enough then Parkinson’s Disease could, at the very least, be significantly mitigated.

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They then discussed that if medical data could be analysed and shared appropriately there could be a massive database of information available to combat future sickness, allow early intervention and reduce the long-term pressure on the NHS.

They also mentioned the UK Biobank programme, which I have been involved in for 15 years or so.

This is a research programme where every year or so I am asked to either answer lifestyle questions around diet, exercise etc, perform cognitive tests, send in urine samples, and on one occasion even have a full CT scan.

The data being produced by this is considered to be world-beating and it is good to know that my occasional interactions with the programme are doing good for society.

Hearing elder statesmen speaking optimistically about technological advances was quite reassuring, and they signed off by saying they would not be returning to frontline politics (although the Tony Blair Institute employs 1,000 people) and likened themselves to two old men sitting on a park bench chewing the fat.

The picture they painted is of technology whirring away in the background, making life better for everyone.

Meanwhile, back in the real world, I had the role of an old man sitting on a park bench last week, as I went on a walk, and, naturally, a sitdown, with some old friends of mine.

We are all technologically competent, but we had to pay for our parking using our phones. Not a huge challenge on the face of it, especially as there are a couple of apps that work relatively seamlessly.

However, on this occasion, yet another app had to be downloaded, and after inputting the location, the colour of the car and the registration number, I had to input my credit card details before being sent to a page where I had to give a full name and address, plus my country.

Twenty-five minutes later I finally managed to pay, the stress only slightly alleviated by the schadenfreude that my friend was double charged as the app also charged him for a car he had sold eight years ago.

I do worry how intimidating and confusing some of these parking apps must be to elderly people, simply wanting a day out and not necessarily owning a smart phone, or indeed any phone at all.

I really hope that as technology continues to advance, as it undoubtedly will, be it in banking or something as simple as parking that people are not left behind.

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