Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!anise!salt.acc.com!lars From: lars@salt.acc.com (Lars J Poulsen) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Re: Mac as airline hand baggage Keywords: Mac airline carryon Message-ID: <1005@anise.acc.com> Date: 31 Jul 89 17:15:08 GMT References: <30351@cornell.UUCP> <362@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU> <3514@ncsuvx.ncsu.edu> Sender: news@anise.acc.com Distribution: usa Organization: Advanced Computer Communications, Santa Barbara, California Lines: 51 In article <3514@ncsuvx.ncsu.edu> jnh@ecemwl.UUCP (Joseph N. Hall) writes: >Europeans, who pay up to twice for Macs what Americans do, are more than >willing to believe that people in America will try to smuggle them to >their friends there. It's your job to convince customs officials that the >Mac you're carrying is YOUR Mac, it's USED, and you DON'T want to sell it. >Theoretically you can be required to post a bond, in each country you visit, >for the amount of duty that would be imposed on the item were you to sell it >there. This is the only sure-fire mechanism for avoiding customs hassles >completely. > >If you want to post bonds (do this well in advance of your travel), contact >the appropriate consulate(s) and get the required forms. (Don't forget your >visa if you're going to France, either...) (1) Almost all countries have a provision for allowing temporary importation and re-exportation of "tools of your trade". (It may however take some courtesy and patience to agree that just as a calculator used to be the tool of the accountant's trade, a Mac is the tool of the programmer's trade). (2) The proper documentation for taking valuable goods temporarily into one or more countries and out again is a "Carnet de passage en douane", "Carnet" for short. This is a green booklet of import and export forms, which get processed by customs whenever you cross a border. In Europe, these are routinely issued by the chamber of commerce for its members. They are intended for demonstration equipment and samples of merchandise carried by travelling salesmen and shipped to trade shows. I am not sure exactly where you get them in this country. Try calling the chamber of commerce, and the customs office. I have travelled a lot with equipment on Carnets. I had a carnet covering a master list of all the stuff I might need to take with me for on-site software development, including terminals, microcomputer development systems, disk packs etc, thrown what I needed in the back of a car, and driven from Copenhagen to London, Zurich, Vienna and back; dropping stuff off on the way sometimes, with the paperwork cleaned up later. At each border crossing, filling out the next pair of forms, and checking out with one customs office, and checking in with the new one. The only time this was a REAL problem was when I missed a flight from Milan to London, and got waitlisted for the next one. The customs people would not process my paperwork before the airline promised I'd be on the next flight, and the airline was reluctant to hold the flight for 20 minutes while I did the customs stuff after they cleared me 10 minutes before departure time. But other than that: It's a small hassle, but no real big deal. You learn cross-cultural stuff by having to talk to bureaucrats in every country you go through. / Lars Poulsen (800) 222-7308 or (805) 963-9431 ext 358 ACC Customer Service Affiliation stated for identification only My employer probably would not agree if he knew what I said !!