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#211
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On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 13:36:06 +0100, Laurence Payne
wrote: How would YOU encourage people onto Oyster? Make Oyster suitable for them, as I've detailed in other posts. Then, once that's all been done, abolish paper ticketing completely. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#212
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On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 19:17:33 +0100, "TKD" wrote:
An outside London ODTC is based on the travelcard price plus whatever the rail company charges to the boundary of Zone 6. The ODTC1-6 has gone up by 30p. The Zone 1 tube single doesn't even come in to the equation. There are still singles to ZONE U1 LONDN, which presumably will be based on that. There are also returns, but those (last time I checked) were the same price as the Peak Travelcard. The difference, incidentally, is that YP Railcard discount is available on singles/returns to ZONE U1 LONDN but not at all on Peak Travelcards (not even on the rail part), so last time I did a peak journey it was on one of those. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#213
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On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 20:02:39 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)"
wrote: IME most people have 2 weeks off at Xmas because their employer gives them no choice. Most people I know don't. I think it depends on the industry, and MX is that more and more companies not in the manufacturing industry do not have a factory shutdown at Christmas - but the exact opposite in that they won't *allow* everyone to be off then! And most people take 2 (or more) weeks holiday in the summer/easter when the kids are off school. Only if you have kids. The rest of us who don't avoid those times like the plague. I guess if you work in retail (or hospitality) it's different, but I would be suprised if almost every one else didn't fit the above. Banking (OK, almost retail), anything that involves call centres and IT to name but three. Service industries in general do not have long-term shutdowns. People expect all-year service (except in many but not all cases 25/12) these days. Things do vary from country to country, of course. YM (in Sweden) MV, if your from address is anything to go by! Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#214
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On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 23:30:20 +0100, Phil Richards
wrote: At least you know about the options. I do, and I would not be averse to having an Oyster if it made sense. I rarely use buses in Milton Keynes, but I do have an MK Metro Saver card lying around for the few occasions when it does come in handy, and it did cost me a fiver (though at the time I was using buses daily). That isn't even as convenient as Oyster as sadly the only thing you can load onto it is a weekly or monthly pass, as it's quite an old technology. If you could put a tenner of "pre-pay" onto it I'd definitely do so to avoid having to fuss with change, even if the fares weren't lower. Now - will people accept I'm not anti-Oyster? The ones that get caught out will be the infrequent users, tourists etc. who fail to find out and, worse still, won't be advised by ticket sellers at stations they have a cheaper option when they fork out 3 quid for a cash single. That's what TfL/LUL need to concentrate on next. Absolutely. I would suggest they needed to do that *before* the punitive fares were proposed. That said, they have 3 months or so to get their act together... Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#215
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On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 23:35:34 +0100, Phil Richards
wrote: Nick Cooper wrote: Except that if you buy a book of 1st Class stamps before a price-rise for basic 1st Class, the "old price" stamps are still valid at the "new price." The same could be said about the Saver 6 tickets which could have been bought at the old price before the fares went up and used after. True. It's only a recent thing, though - I'm fairly sure that 1st and 2nd class stamps used to have the price printed on them, so if you had a load and the price went up you had to go to the Post Office and buy a load of 1 or 2p stamps to be able to use them. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#216
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![]() "Richard J." wrote in message . uk... That's because they're in the London Borough of Wandsworth, famous for setting a zero poll tax, and which still has a very low council tax rate. I assume that by some quirk of government funding, LBW have managed to get an extremely favourable deal. I don't think that Wandsworth gets a particularily good deal on its government funding but it is much more efficient than most councils.. Regards Sunil |
#217
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![]() "Arthur Figgis" ] wrote in message ... On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 18:07 +0100 (BST), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: We had that problem in Warsaw. It seemed easier to walk everywhere than work out how to buy bus and tram tickets. Many places seem to assume visitors will use taxis for everything. That's because many Americans do. And as I have posted before, IME it is common for non first language English speakers not to be able to tell the difference between the various English language countries' accents (strange as it may seem to you and I). Little kiosks called RUCH sell them. Them being sufficiently imprecise to non-Polish speakers to decide not to bother. Or the kiosks weren't open. One or the other. IIRC on some Polish trams you even need a separate ticket for your bag. You do in Milan as well. Debrecen in Hungary has excellent information on ticketing options in multiple languages at its tram stops. Unlike somewhere I've forgotten where I once went, where the tourist-specific literature was only available in the local language, which was Basque or Slovenian or something else which visitors would be pretty unlikely to speak. What I find annoying is some countries[1] insistance on translating, into multiple languages, the instructions for using the machine (put money in slot etc), which IMHO a child the age of 10 can work out for themselves and keeping the complicated zonal rules only in the home language. How on earth can I "press the button for the correct ticket for you journey" if you haven't told me how I can work out what actually is the correct ticket for my journey. When I went to Charleroi the tram ticket office wouldn't sell me a day ticket until an English-speaking native stepped in to help me. The staff were convinced that I must have thought I was in Brussels, as they thought no-one in their right mind would go to their city. The Dutch Strippenkaart is in the process of being replaced by a national all-modes smart card, but I believe it is delayed because of various problems with it. Denmark has just awarded the same people a contract for a national smart card. EDS :-( tim [1] Switzerland is top of my hit list, I think there are others. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#218
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![]() People not from London can stop complaining too. Londoners deserve cheaper fares, in fact we pay in part for the costs of the Underground through our council tax so I'm perfectly happy to no longer subsidise tourists and visitors who, for whatever reason, do not adopt Oyster. OK. Would you like to pay higher fares on other cities' public transport systems, such as the heavily-subsidised systems in German cities, or indeed Merseyrail in Liverpool, which is the second highest-subsidised per passenger mile national rail franchise in the country, and I wouldn't be surprised if higher than LUL? No, I didn't think so. Public transport is for the public, not just for local people, though the actions of some provincial bus companies (or more the inactions) may make you think otherwise. In every case I can think of using foreign metro systems I have just bought whatever ticket looked like the cheapest and the quickest to acquire and haven't really researched all that much in to how the system works and what is really the best option, as I would at home. I have no doubt I have paid over the odds in many places. However I don't really care. The reason for this is that when travelling on business my employer pays and not me and when on holiday I just want to get from A to B with the least fuss. I'm sure most infrequent tourists and visitors are much the same. |
#219
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![]() "Nick Cooper" wrote in message ... On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 20:02:39 +0200, "tim \(moved to sweden\)" wrote: IME most people have 2 weeks off at Xmas because their employer gives them no choice. Absolutely no people I know - and that cover a wide variety of jobs - gets that. Just about the closest would be employers who shutdown from XmD to NYD, which is only 8-10 days depending on when the weekends fall, although of course 5-7 of those days are weekends or bank holidays. This is exactly right. I did not say they had to use 10 days leave, but that they had a period of 2 weeks when the did not go to work. No-one is sensibly going to buy a monthly season on the 4th of December as they will not be using it from 25th to the 1st (and in many cases longer). And most people take 2 (or more) weeks holiday in the summer/easter when the kids are off school. It may have escaped your notice, but there are more households in the country _without_ children than those with. They still take holidays in 'chunks'. Also, not everyone takes two-week holidays, kids or not. Most do IME. I guess if you work in retail (or hospitality) it's different, but I would be suprised if almost every one else didn't fit the above. I would suggest that if you work in just about every sector it's different., and that you're just wrong. I work in an 'office' environment and have done so for 20 years. Almost everone in the office takes a consecutive holiday break. tim |
#220
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![]() "Nick Cooper" wrote in message ... On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 08:31:59 +0100, U n d e r a c h i e v e r wrote: On 4/10/05 8:39 pm, in article .com, "Mizter T" wrote: in cash single fares on the Tubes and buses, but the BBC News story story contains the critical information on how to avoid these fares increases. And that is to ***get an Oyster card and start using the Pre Pay system to pay for single fares on the Tubes and buses***. It is that simple. Not if you get on the bus and find you are out of credit. How is this different from getting on a bus and finding you are out of money? Because I can check first. Remind me. Where do I get one of these Oyster credit checkers to keep in my pocket? tim |
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