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The pre-pay balance of an Oyster card can be topped up at ticket machines at railway stations (TfL and National Rail) where Oyster is accepted, as well as at Oyster Ticket Stops in convenience stores, and TfL Visitor Centres. [57]
The Oyster card, the first major implementation of fare capping, uses MIFARE smart cards with proprietary programming, with equipment connected to proprietary back-office systems. The Oyster card began to support fare capping in 2005, 7 years after the system's initial design began in 1998.
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The first large scale adoption of smartcards for transport in Great Britain was by Transport for London (TfL) with the Oyster card. [6] It was initially only available on TfL services, but it has been progressively rolled out to National Rail services in and around Greater London. ITSO cards can also now be used on Oyster card readers. [7]
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Rossman recommends keeping your balance to less than 30% of your credit card limit. Fore example, if your limit is $1,000, you should try to keep your balance below $300.
Lipetsk Transport System united transport card: Lipetsk Transport: 1 Jan 2010 Moscow: Troika: Moscow Metro and Mosgortrans: 2 April 2013 Transport Card: Moscow Metro: 1 September 1998 Transport Card: Mosgortrans: Introduced on 12 May 2001. Fully implemented on all routes in April 2006. 3 of 689 routes now working without turnstiles. Nizhny Novgorod