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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 1 January 2025. Electronic telecommunications device to perform financial transactions Several terms redirect here. For other uses, see Cash machine (disambiguation), Money machine (disambiguation), and ATM (disambiguation). An old Nixdorf ATM Smaller indoor ATMs dispense money inside convenience stores ...
Money Access Center (MAC, also Money Access Card) was an ATM network in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwestern United States, between 1979 and 2005, when it was absorbed into the STAR network. The network was one of the first in the nation, and helped universalize ATM banking.
John Adrian Shepherd-Barron was born on 23 June 1925 in Shillong (now Meghalaya), India, to British parents.His Scottish father, Wilfred Shepherd-Barron, was chief engineer of the Chittagong Port Commissioners in North Bengal, which was then part of the British Empire, then later Chief Engineer of the Port of London Authority, before becoming president of the Institution of Civil Engineers ...
The first ATM opened to the public in 1969. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Commonly known as an ATM today, automated banking machines had a few different names decades ago
The authors of a 2009 study in the journal Marketing Science credited Simjian with the first concept (1957), the first patent (1957), and the first prototype (1960) of the ATM, which they listed as a radical innovation, but credited De La Rue Instruments with mico-commercialization, the first sale of an innovation (1967), and Docutel with macro ...
The world's first ATM debuted in London in 1967, and ever since then ATM users have been advised to be on the lookout for would-be thieves. Nearly 60 years later, robberies involving ATM ...
The PIN originated with the introduction of the automated teller machine (ATM) in 1967, as an efficient way for banks to dispense cash to their customers. The first ATM system was that of Barclays in London, in 1967; it accepted cheques with machine-readable encoding, rather than cards, and matched the PIN to the cheque.