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#31
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Roland Perry wrote:
It is clear to me that the specification is faulty in this case. The failure mechanism would appear to be someone touching in, and then touching out on a gate but failing to go through the gate. So they are still "airside", and capable of catching a train somewhere. This is such a fundamental fraud vector that whoever designed the system to allow it (while penalising innocent passengers whose platform was changed at the last minute) should be hung out to dry. What do you suggest? Landside validators to confirm you've left the platform. .... or even an option on the ticket machines to do the same? Wouldn't even require special extra validators. #Paul |
#32
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On 14/02/2015 8:38 AM, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 22:43:23 on Fri, 13 Feb 2015, Barry Salter remarked: On 13/02/2015 6:23 AM, Roland Perry wrote: What if the traveller was using Contactless - can the SWT ticket offices deal with hiccups then? Contactless issues are a Helpdesk job, unfortunately. Would that require you to find someone to let you back airside in order to come back with a touch-out? I'd be reluctant to touch-in, in case it triggered yet another layer of problems. Depends on how the gateline's laid out, and how busy it is. You may just be able to lean over from an adjacent gate and do it yourself. assuming you were still within the maximum journey time. Given that the exercise started when SWT cancelled a train, would Delay Repay allow you to add the time queuing at the ticket office to the overall journey delay? SWT still work on the "old" Passenger Charter system, rather than Delay Repay, so probably...Point's moot anyway, given they don't do Oyster. Or you just wait 'til the following day and go to the Oyster website (assuming your card is registered) or phone the Helpdesk and they'll sort it out for you with significantly less faffing around... What a performance! Just because SWT was a driver short. Yup...But TfL will still you that Oyster/Contactless are so much more "convenient" for passengers than paper tickets... |
#33
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On 13/02/2015 22:43, Barry Salter wrote:
Or you just wait 'til the following day and go to the Oyster website (assuming your card is registered) or phone the Helpdesk and they'll sort it out for you with significantly less faffing around... Has the Oyster telephone Helpline improved recently? I ask because my only experiences of using it (a couple of years ago) involved hanging on the phone for at between 20 and 30 minutes each time. Had I not been using my included minutes on the phone this would have completely negated the value that I eventually got restored to my Oyster card. -- Clive Page |
#34
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#35
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On Sat, 14 Feb 2015 08:44:09 +0000
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 16:38:53 on Fri, 13 Feb 2015, d remarked: What do you suggest? Landside validators to confirm you've left the platform. Nah, there's a far more simple solution - if no one goes through the gates on a touch out (infra red beam not triggered) before they close THEN you deduct a penalty fare otherwise you refund. The fare dodgers could just wave an umbrella/briefcase through the beam to get it to falsely register their departure. True, but that would look a bit obvious to any staff standing nearby or on CCTV evidence later. Besides - how many average plebs even know about the infra red detectors? -- Spud |
#36
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#38
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On Fri, Feb 13, 2015 at 11:40:00AM +0000, Roland Perry wrote:
Lack of transparency is a long term complaint that I (and others) have with TfL's fares policy. Of course, this would never have happened if they'd been re-nationalised. (Oh.. wait...) I don't think that the problem is lack of transparency. The problem is that the fare structure is too complex for any normal person to remember. -- David Cantrell | Hero of the Information Age Wow, my first sigquoting! I feel so special now! -- Dan Sugalski |
#39
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On Sat, Feb 14, 2015 at 02:58:40PM +0000, Barry Salter wrote:
On 14/02/2015 8:38 AM, Roland Perry wrote: What a performance! Just because SWT was a driver short. Yup...But TfL will still you that Oyster/Contactless are so much more "convenient" for passengers than paper tickets... To be fair they *are* more convenient if you assume that there are no systematic errors. And this is a common assumption amongst employees of companies that have complex customer-facing systems - it's far too easy to think that it's the user's fault for doing something wrong when the real problem is that the system is too complex for the user to have a hope in hell of getting everything right. -- David Cantrell | Minister for Arbitrary Justice Good advice is always certain to be ignored, but that's no reason not to give it -- Agatha Christie |
#40
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On Sat, Feb 14, 2015 at 10:05:19PM +0000, Clive Page wrote:
On 13/02/2015 22:43, Barry Salter wrote: Or you just wait 'til the following day and go to the Oyster website (assuming your card is registered) or phone the Helpdesk and they'll sort it out for you with significantly less faffing around... Has the Oyster telephone Helpline improved recently? Top tip: -- David Cantrell | top google result for "internet beard fetish club" I don't do .INI, .BAT, or .SYS files. I don't assign apps to files. I don't configure peripherals or networks before using them. I have a computer to do all that. I have a Macintosh, not a hobby. -- Fritz Anderson |
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