mas.to is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
Hello! mas.to is a fast, up-to-date and fun Mastodon server.

Administered by:

Server stats:

12K
active users

I recently noticed that the State of Illinois has changed the font of the *stamping* on license plates.

The design is the same, but the stamped text is a bit thinner and the glyphs are blockier.

I am surprised how much this change is bothering me, to be honest. It has never occurred to me how much that is a defining feature. The first one I saw I assumed had to be fake!

But - I'm relieved they're still being stamped.

Shame on all the states that just print them now. Cheapskates.

@TechConnectify Yeah, but look at all the REALLY COOL plates you can get in Arizona now! Seriously, I do think some are awesome and it's an easy way for the state to make money.

Now if only the other states could catch up and get rid of the front plate too!

I'd like to see something replace plates altogether. They have a lot of flaws.

@weiln I disagree so hard on the front plate thing.

Several hit-and-runs get solved every year because the front plate fell off and was left at the scene. I really do not understand the aversion to putting another $1 piece of metal on the front of your car other than aesthetic preferences, and when we're dealing with machines that can kill people aesthetic preferences like that can go eff allllll the way off.

@TechConnectify The one downside I’ve seen with front plates in Portland, because they also have registration stickers, is that they get stolen and re-used as illegal back places on similar-model cars. But that seems like a minor downside and ultimately fixable if the front/rear plates had distinctly different design elements.

@BrianEnigma @TechConnectify The US system for plates is weird. replacement plates or stickers every year? That seems just a bit dumb and backwards. It's all on computer already, so why not deal with it there? You didn't pay this year? They'll already know, and could flag your number.

@fuzzysteve @BrianEnigma I don't know. It seems pretty reasonable to me.

Here, the sticker changes color every year. So when you see a car with a sticker that's two colors old, you know at a glance that driver hasn't renewed their registration. No need to look anything up.

In fact, I would rather have mechanisms like that then require a bunch of cameras and or manual lookups.

@TechConnectify @fuzzysteve @BrianEnigma Yea, but you have to balance that against the cost (non-zero) and the expectation of whether that sticker is ever going to catch anyone at all. PA gave up stickers several years ago, but I don't have data on whether that's a net plus or minus.

@mhkohne @fuzzysteve @BrianEnigma The way Illinois does it, the cost is pretty close to zero.

The stickers are part of a pre-made form that goes through a laser printer. That same form then becomes the thing you keep in your glove compartment with your information about registration and stuff.

Granted, I don't know what the actual cost is, but it's been cleverly integrated into a thing they already have to do and it's a standard laser printer doing the printing.

Technology Connections

@mhkohne @fuzzysteve @BrianEnigma (although, funnily enough, there was a supply issue last year and the sticker for some reason wasn't printable. So they all just said "Illinois 23" but the color mechanism is the most important part.

It's not like the month on the sticker helps anyone out but the owner to know when their car is about to expire (or I guess maaaaybe parking lot enforcement)