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#11
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On Sat, 16 Jul 2016 19:28:28 +0100
"tim..." wrote: "burfordTjustice" wrote in message ... On Sat, 16 Jul 2016 11:49:30 +0100 Clive Page wrote: So for this rather simple cross-London journey both main journey planners failed badly Why would anyone need a machine to plan their trip? You must be pretty stupid if you can not plan your own route. Luton airport is an awkward destination because there are fast trains, semi fast trains and slow trains Getting to the airport at time X and taking the first train may not be the smart thing to do tim So you are stupid and dependent on someone's machine to figure things out for you. As the op stated seems the machines are just a stupid. Care for your self and not be dependent on government or others to care for you... Damn folks Man up and tend to yourself and families. |
#12
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On 16/07/2016 12:43, Basil Jet wrote:
Is this not just a case of the Cannon Street line being messed around by engineering work? No, seems to be running normally this morning, i.e. one train to Plumstead via Deptford every 15 mins. -- Clive Page |
#13
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On 16/07/2016 16:26, burfordTjustice wrote:
On Sat, 16 Jul 2016 11:49:30 +0100 Clive Page wrote: So for this rather simple cross-London journey both main journey planners failed badly Why would anyone need a machine to plan their trip? You must be pretty stupid if you can not plan your own route. Thank you for those kind and perceptive comments. As I explained, there are (at least) three routes with similar timings, and it required detailed study of timetables for Thameslink, EMT, and SE trains, plus getting estimates of times on Northern, Jubilee, and Circle/District lines, as well as checking for the effects of weekend engineering works, to work out the best route for any given departure time. This is the sort of job that ought to be ideally suited to computers. We have had on-line journey planners for at least 15 years now, but it seems to me that they are still stuck in the 20th Century, and have hardly advanced in all that time. Of course one can do all the work oneself and in this case I had to but it took me the best part of half-an-hour, but I really don't understand why there is not a single on-line journey planner that can do the work much more quickly and reliably. -- l Clive Page |
#14
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In message , at 09:18:45 on Sun, 17
Jul 2016, Clive Page remarked: Of course one can do all the work oneself and in this case I had to but it took me the best part of half-an-hour, but I really don't understand why there is not a single on-line journey planner that can do the work much more quickly and reliably. Ever since the government scrapped the "Transport Direct", I use Google Maps. It's simple and reliable. -- Roland Perry |
#15
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Arthur Conan Doyle wrote:
Clive Page wrote: Does anyone know of any better journey planners out there? Citymapper shows a 65 minute journey, via Cannon Street. Des Citymapper use actual time tables or does ot just take average times - I have trmoved one app bevause of that and think it was this one -- Mark |
#16
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Clive Page wrote:
Someone I know wants to go tomorrow (Sunday) from Luton Airport Parkway station to Deptford. Trains to Deptford go from Cannon Street calling at London Bridge. So this is a pretty simple journey, really, and there seem to be three reasonable routes: (1) LTN to West Hampstead, then Jubilee line to London Bridge. (2) LTN to St. Pancras, then Northern Line to London Bridge. (3) LTN to Blackfriars, then Circle/District line to Cannon Street. Without checking lots of timetables I was not sure which would be fastest, so I thought I would try the two main online journey planners. I appreciate that journey planning is a complex job, but it seems to me that the current examples do a rather poor job even in fairly simple cases. Does anyone know of any better journey planners out there? Travellink South East gives only one journet with fast walk and that is your number one route taking 75-6 minutes Average walk makes these 87-9 miunutes but adds some longer ones Thaneslink to Elephant and Castel then bus to New Cross then 10 mins walk - taking 106 mins and a 99 min journey LTN-StaPancras-KX-Northerm to Bank- DLR to Cutty Sark- Bus to Deptford A slow walk gives 1 as 93-102 mins but adds 3 (change at Farringdon not Blackfriars ie the oyjer way round the circle ) as 94 mins So depends on how fast you walk ![]() yjought of and only 1 actually competes. -- Mark |
#17
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On Sun, 17 Jul 2016 09:18:45 +0100
Clive Page wrote: it took me the best part of half-an-hour, damn, stop the world, a whole half hour to plan a trip...Pathetic |
#18
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(Mark Bestley) wrote:
Des Citymapper use actual time tables or does ot just take average times - I have trmoved one app bevause of that and think it was this one Good question. I assumed it uses actual timetables as the journey times vary depending on when you choose to depart, but I suppose that might not be the case. |
#19
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Clive Page wrote:
On 16/07/2016 16:26, burfordTjustice wrote: On Sat, 16 Jul 2016 11:49:30 +0100 Clive Page wrote: So for this rather simple cross-London journey both main journey planners failed badly Why would anyone need a machine to plan their trip? You must be pretty stupid if you can not plan your own route. Thank you for those kind and perceptive comments. As I explained, there are (at least) three routes with similar timings, and it required detailed study of timetables for Thameslink, EMT, and SE trains, plus getting estimates of times on Northern, Jubilee, and Circle/District lines, as well as checking for the effects of weekend engineering works, to work out the best route for any given departure time. This is the sort of job that ought to be ideally suited to computers. We have had on-line journey planners for at least 15 years now, but it seems to me that they are still stuck in the 20th Century, and have hardly advanced in all that time. I think you are being somewhat harsh on the TfL Planner, it gave you a perfectly reasonable route. Exactly which option is quickest will largely depend on how much time you allow for the interchanges. It is very likely all three options would have ended up on the same train out of London Bridge. Peter Smyth |
#20
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On 17/07/2016 10:02, Roland Perry wrote:
Ever since the government scrapped the "Transport Direct", I use Google Maps. It's simple and reliable. Do you know whether it has up-to-date info on engineering works etc? I tried to find out but Google's algorithms seem to be hidden. -- Clive Page |
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