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Payzone is an Irish consumer payment service provider company based in Dublin. The company processes electronic transactions, including debit and credit card transactions mobile phone top ups, M50 motorway toll payments, Leap travel cards , local property tax payments, pay-by-phone parking, pre-paid and bill pay utility and parcel collection ...
Electric Ireland (Irish: Leictreachas Éireann) [1] [2] is an Irish utility company that supplies electricity and gas to business and residential customers in Ireland. It is the supply division of the Electricity Supply Board, the former monopoly electricity company in Ireland. The company now operates in an open market competing for the supply ...
In 2018, the UK post office acquired the UK payment business from Payzone's owner after it was split from the Irish Payzone (Ireland) business. [2] [7] In 2019, the company won a contract to provide payment services to British Gas, from its main rival Paypoint, specifically for pre-paid cards for gas and electricity meters. The switch over to ...
An Australian man has been found not guilty of rape after blaming it on “sexsomnia.” Timothy Malcolm Rowland, 40, was found not guilty of rape after a seven-day trial after jurors agreed that ...
This 18-piece box of chocolates is the little sister of the 36-piece box on sale for $39. This set comes with 10 flavors across 18 pieces of chocolate, including caramels, pralines, and ganaches.
An Olympic equestrian athlete had his results from the Paris Olympics thrown out after he inadvertently tested positive for a banned substance after giving his sick dog eye drops.
With Ireland's towns and cities benefiting from electricity, the new government pushed the idea of Rural Electrification. Between 1946 and 1979, the ESB connected in excess of 420,000 customers in rural Ireland. The Rural Electrification Scheme has been described as "the Quiet Revolution" because of the major socio-economic change it brought about.
Example of a TFI Leap Card. The TFI Leap Card is a contactless smart card for automated fare collection overseen by Transport for Ireland (TFI). It was introduced in the Greater Dublin area in 2011 for Luas, DART, Iarnród Éireann and Dublin Bus, [1] but acceptance has significantly expanded, and it is now accepted in cities nationwide and on some longer distance commuter routes.