trevord wrote on Jan 23
rd, 2006 at 1:45pm:
What isn't clear is:
- when "a day" starts: is it a calendar day (midnight to midnight), which makes it a bit rough on people who only want to watch for, say 1.5 - 2 hours in the evening, especially if they have only just been admitted or come round from an operation; or is it 23/24h from when you pays your money?
Neither. My understanding of how it works is this.
The system differs slightly between 'Terminal 1' and 'Terminal 2' systems. With the latter, a single card is purchased with credit for TV, phone, movies, games, and internet.
With the older 'Terminal 1' systems, the TV, phone, and movie cards are separate, and TV cards for 1, 3, 5, or 7 days cost £3.50, £10, £15, or £20 respectively. Payment can alternatively be made by credit/debit card (through calling an 0800 number), in which case the terminal is credited and no card is required.
With 'Terminal 1', when the patient selects 'TV', the picture is obscured by a message, which, if a TV card with credit is inserted (or the terminal has credit/debit card credit), tells the patient that to watch TV for the following 24 hours they must press the 'pay' button, which consumes 1 day of their credit, and the picture is displayed. They will need to press the 'pay' button again if the TV is on at the end of that 24 hour period, or the next time they select 'TV', in which the next 24 period starts then. In other words the credit is consumed in 24 hour chunks by pressing the 'pay' button.
I am not familiar with 'Terminal 2', except that credit on one 'universal' card is consumed at the relevant rate by selecting or using using the various services.