From ba1231ddc0d06272af8922e77de1b7e5af6800e1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Philip Sargent Date: Thu, 19 May 2022 15:54:05 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] fix bad link to boe most recently used --- handbook/bankofexpo.html | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/handbook/bankofexpo.html b/handbook/bankofexpo.html index d1cfa9b19..65c9f0f04 100644 --- a/handbook/bankofexpo.html +++ b/handbook/bankofexpo.html @@ -12,7 +12,8 @@

Please be respectful of this website as you'll find you can edit transactions that others have listed. This is to allow people to collaboratively add their combined expenses with all the complications that cavers bring to anything. However, it could be abused. Please don't. The admins can see records of who changed what and when.

BoC was originally designed for caving club/meet use, but is flexible enough for expo use, where expenses are distributed by number of nights/car-passengers/beers. Being online helps accounting transparency, allows real-time review of creditors/debtors, and, if input permissions are devolved, reduces the burden on the treasurer. Once everything is entered and correctly allocated the accounts should be done without further work. It correctly handles multiple currencies and exchange rates changing over time.

Please read how these expenses records are also kept manually on paper in the Bier and Sesh books in the potato hut. -

The current Bank of Expo is hosted at expo.survex.com/boe/ (and the previous year at expo.survex.com/boe-lastyear/. +

The current Bank of Expo is hosted at expo.survex.com/boe/ +(and the most recent year it was used at expo.survex.com/boe-2018/.

Bank of Expo (and the same software running as Bank of CUCC for ordinary caving trips) was written by Stuart Bennett in Cambridge. He says:

"BoC is a multi-user auditable online share-based accounting system. The `share-based' part is probably its distinguishing feature: absolute amounts are split evenly across the slates of implicated users and/or ring-fenced cost-pools. Transactions are automatically double-entry, and as real-world transactions are made against a real bank account, the