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In message , at
05:50:38 on Thu, 7 Nov 2013, Neil Williams remarked: 1. No unresolved journeys. The way I would work this is the same way as many other systems do it, such as Singapore - touching in charges the maximum Oyster single fare to the card that could apply from that station (subject to cap if appropriate for London), and touching out refunds back the difference back to the journey you actually made. If you don't touch out, you don't get it back, tough. That is powerful motivation, and far, far less complicated. The last one I had to sort out was my wife who arrived at Waterloo (on a paper ticket) who was clutching her Oyster to make an onward trip on the tube, and got psycho-babbled into "always touching" when she exited the platform to the concourse. TfL assumes this means "I've blagged a trip to here from somewhere without a touch-in barrier" whereas to the traveller it means "I've arrived in Oyster country, so start logging my trips from here onwards". -- Roland Perry |
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"Roland Perry" wrote Can you explain what you mean by "so much human intervention"? presume he means when buying the card, and when spending hours talking to the helpline to sort out unresolved journeys etc. Plus of course the effort of getting printouts for "expenses purposes" when all you need do with a paper ticket is hand in the ticket itself. Huh ? Has it escaped your notice that the final exit gate swallows your paper ticket ? First time this made a difference to me was attending a job interview at the Met Office. Bracknall station had just been fitted with barriers. Before mag stripe tickets the the barrier attendant took your ticket. -- Mike D |
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In message , at 16:23:31 on Thu, 7 Nov
2013, Michael R N Dolbear remarked: Can you explain what you mean by "so much human intervention"? presume he means when buying the card, and when spending hours talking to the helpline to sort out unresolved journeys etc. Plus of course the effort of getting printouts for "expenses purposes" when all you need do with a paper ticket is hand in the ticket itself. Huh ? Has it escaped your notice that the final exit gate swallows your paper ticket ? It has not escaped my notice that many of them don't, eg Kings Cross. And you can always ask the person manning the gates if you can keep the ticket for expenses purposes. As well as asking for a receipt from the ticket seller (human or machine) when buying. First time this made a difference to me was attending a job interview at the Met Office. Bracknall station had just been fitted with barriers. Which I doubt are operating 24x7, but also see above. Before mag stripe tickets the the barrier attendant or no-one at all took your ticket. -- Roland Perry |
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Neil Williams wrote:
On Wednesday, 6 November 2013 23:59:35 UTC, Paul Corfield wrote: Can you explain what you mean by "so much human intervention"? What would be your example of a system or facility not requiring so much intervention? My aims perhaps differ from TfL's (with union pressure) given my experience of German systems which are generally completely unstaffed except drivers and the odd security guard, but I would have had a core requirement that all ticket offices could be closed when the system was fully implemented, and that it could fully replace paper tickets. This wouldn't necessarily result in redundancies, but rather I would have roving staff to assist in the use of ticket machines. I'd do the same for the mainline, FWIW. So, some examples of how I would have done it differently:- 1. No unresolved journeys. The way I would work this is the same way as many other systems do it, such as Singapore - touching in charges the maximum Oyster single fare to the card that could apply from that station (subject to cap if appropriate for London), and touching out refunds back the difference back to the journey you actually made. If you don't touch out, you don't get it back, tough. That is powerful motivation, and far, far less complicated. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? 2. OSIs (out of station interchanges) seem to be the biggest cause of this. I've posted about ways these could be tidied up before - one way is to always close the journey on touching out, but reopen it when touching back in at an OSI location. Leaving journeys open was a silly piece of design again asking for a need for intervention. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? 3. All card transactions, be that dispensing, refunding or whatever, possible ONLY from automated ticket machines, NOT from ticket offices. Well, that's probably going to happen. Most suburban ticket offices are already open only for very limited periods, and the plan is apparently to close them altogether. |
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In message
, at 11:12:57 on Thu, 7 Nov 2013, Recliner remarked: 1. No unresolved journeys. The way I would work this is the same way as many other systems do it, such as Singapore - touching in charges the maximum Oyster single fare to the card that could apply from that station (subject to cap if appropriate for London), and touching out refunds back the difference back to the journey you actually made. If you don't touch out, you don't get it back, tough. That is powerful motivation, and far, far less complicated. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? No, because you can phone them up and argue about it. 2. OSIs (out of station interchanges) seem to be the biggest cause of this. I've posted about ways these could be tidied up before - one way is to always close the journey on touching out, but reopen it when touching back in at an OSI location. Leaving journeys open was a silly piece of design again asking for a need for intervention. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? A slight variation on this... Isn't one of the known problems that when you travel A-B complete your business rapidly and then travel B-A, when B has OSI? In other words the initial exit doesn't complete the journey, and when you re-enter the network and go back where you came from it gets confused. -- Roland Perry |
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 11:12:57 on Thu, 7 Nov 2013, Recliner remarked: 1. No unresolved journeys. The way I would work this is the same way as many other systems do it, such as Singapore - touching in charges the maximum Oyster single fare to the card that could apply from that station (subject to cap if appropriate for London), and touching out refunds back the difference back to the journey you actually made. If you don't touch out, you don't get it back, tough. That is powerful motivation, and far, far less complicated. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? No, because you can phone them up and argue about it. The reason you can argue is if the system has gone wrong (eg, gates not working, or train failed/delayed excessively), not because the basic algorithm is wrong. 2. OSIs (out of station interchanges) seem to be the biggest cause of this. I've posted about ways these could be tidied up before - one way is to always close the journey on touching out, but reopen it when touching back in at an OSI location. Leaving journeys open was a silly piece of design again asking for a need for intervention. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? A slight variation on this... Isn't one of the known problems that when you travel A-B complete your business rapidly and then travel B-A, when B has OSI? In other words the initial exit doesn't complete the journey, and when you re-enter the network and go back where you came from it gets confused. I think it 'provisionally' completes the journey, but reopens it if the station is re-entered through another exit within a specified time. |
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On Thu, 07 Nov 2013 11:12:57 -0600, Recliner
wrote: But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? .... But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? No. Both situations create unresolved journeys. These usually require intervention to correct, though I think a few cases now correct themselves. Neil -- Neil Williams. Use neil before the at to reply. |
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Neil Williams wrote:
On Thu, 07 Nov 2013 11:12:57 -0600, Recliner wrote: But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? ... But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? No. Both situations create unresolved journeys. These usually require intervention to correct, though I think a few cases now correct themselves. How is an unresolved journey, where you have to pay the max possible fare from that station, any different from charging the max possible fare from the station? Your suggested algorithm sounds identical to Oyster's existing algorithm. |
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In message
, at 16:13:34 on Thu, 7 Nov 2013, Recliner remarked: 1. No unresolved journeys. The way I would work this is the same way as many other systems do it, such as Singapore - touching in charges the maximum Oyster single fare to the card that could apply from that station (subject to cap if appropriate for London), and touching out refunds back the difference back to the journey you actually made. If you don't touch out, you don't get it back, tough. That is powerful motivation, and far, far less complicated. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? No, because you can phone them up and argue about it. The reason you can argue is if the system has gone wrong (eg, gates not working, or train failed/delayed excessively), not because the basic algorithm is wrong. It seems to me that the "less complicated" solution being proposed would not have the possibility to argue in those circumstances. You'd just lose the money. That's an operational failing, not an algorithmic one. 2. OSIs (out of station interchanges) seem to be the biggest cause of this. I've posted about ways these could be tidied up before - one way is to always close the journey on touching out, but reopen it when touching back in at an OSI location. Leaving journeys open was a silly piece of design again asking for a need for intervention. But isn't that exactly what Oyster does? A slight variation on this... Isn't one of the known problems that when you travel A-B complete your business rapidly and then travel B-A, when B has OSI? In other words the initial exit doesn't complete the journey, and when you re-enter the network and go back where you came from it gets confused. I think it 'provisionally' completes the journey, but reopens it if the station is re-entered through another exit within a specified time. That's right, but if you end up back at A (or a station C, near A) it is then likely to penalise you because your journey A-C apparently took "too long", and the current algorithm wishes to penalise slow-coaches, presumably because they see it as evidence of some form of fare-dodging. A better algorithm (but it requires more hardware too, and makes the system more complex to navigate)) is some sort of validator at B which allows the traveller to say "please force a completion of journey A-B". Only then would the person be charged [a pair of] correct fares (which also work within the cap), rather than a penalty fare (which I believe are outwith the capping regime). -- Roland Perry |
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