Because you will learn to recognize the pin numbers, if not remembering them 
(it's hard), you might try what I do.

I print a lengthy line of characters on a small sheet. Choose the first letter 
of each bank or card, and a standard random charactor offset, say 2 for the 
first pin, 4 for the second, 3 for the third, it matters not. Even using the 
same offset for each works. 

Lets say your cards and bank cards each start with abc. and all the pins are 
1234. With a straight 3 space offset, your line of characters would read 
A#R1234B371234C6z1234 etc. As you are the one who set it up, the pins would 
stick out when you are viewing the string, but not for others. You know the #R, 
37, 6z are just fillers between the A, B, C. The pins would not read all the 
same as they do here, further defining the line as gibberish.

Whip out the paper, stare at it for a while, put it back, enter your pin #.

In my case, with a good visual memory, I threw all kinds of junk in there with 
different offsets for both the banks initial and the pins, which being 
alpha-numeric added to the gibberishness of the line of type.

Works for me!

JJM

On Apr 14, 2014, at 08:46 , Ralf R Radermacher wrote:

> That at least saved me a day around various local authorities. But since 
> then, I've been trying to memorise the bl**dy new PIN codes of all those new 
> bank and credit cards.


-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to