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Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
On 3 Jan 2006 11:43:50 -0800, "
wrote: TKD, sorry, I meant Olympia! I don't know why pre-pay can't be used on NR between West Brompton and Olympia. Tube paper singles are valid. I wonder what makes the NLL/WLL "special" compared to all the other NR routes where Tube singles are valid (where pre-pay is almost always valid too). Richard, I am confused. If I had a Zone 1 and 2 annual Travelcard, and converted it to Oyster, I don't believe you can "convert" a ticket in this way... On a different issue, supposing I had Oyster prepay to entitle me to travel between Tottenham Hale and Seven Sisters, but boarded a NR instead of Underground train and decided to get off at an intermediate station, what would happen? It's at least arguable that you could legally travel from Tottenham Hale to Liverpool Street, then take another train from there to Seven Sisters (assuming you can do that without going through the barriers at Liverpool St), using pre-pay. However, it's explicity not valid at intermediate stations (between Liverpool Street and Tottenham Hale/Seven Sisters). What, if any, "penalty" would I have to pay upon exit? You could expect to pay a Penalty Fare if tickets are being inspected at the station you leave through. Also, you wouldn't be able to "touch out" and complete the pre-pay journey, so you might also be charged a penalty for the unresolved journey (it was mentioned in this group some time ago that TfL intended to make this charge equivalent to the full Z1-6 pre-pay fare, though there have been no reports of this actually being imposed yet). Could I really be penalised for SHORTENING my journey? It will no doubt enrage you to learn that if you get on at Liverpool Street but don't travel all the way to Seven Sisters/Tottenham Hale/Walthamstow, a £5.00 penalty is automatically deduced from your pre-pay balance. |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
On Tue, 03 Jan 2006 23:12:20 +0000, Barry Salter
wrote: Another problem is that, as far as I'm aware, none of the PC-based Ticket Issuing Systems can be updated to support Oyster, so TOCs would either need to replace their systems (again) or get machines similar to those used by TfL Ticket Stops (formerly Pass Agents). I don't think is true at all. Any of the PC based systems are far easier to upgrade than APTIS ever was and I saw and used the prototype smartcard reader attached to an APTIS machine over 6 years ago! The option of using PASS EPOS machines was looked at but was obviously frowned upon from an accounting and audit viewpoint by Rail Settlement Plan who are the guardians of National Rail ticketing / accounting standards for retailing. The TOCs and their chosen suppliers have simply opted not to spend the money (that TfL was ready to provide) or enter into the appropriate agreements to allow software to be written that could interface with a generically supplied read / write Oyster target. After all the ticket machine simply has to recognise a card is present, accept the sale requirement, encode it to the card, receive confirmation that the transaction is complete on the card and then complete its own transaction. Easy stuff. Put very simply this is organisational and business "politics" of the absolute worst kind where the customer comes last. I know - I experienced the icy blasts of ATOC cynicism 7 or 8 years ago. I think I had two allies in the room - from what was LTS Rail and Virgin Trains. These company reps no longer work for either organisation but were both people who could see the opportunities the technology would provide and how it linked to other things that were happening in the wider IT, Internet and retail markets. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
On 3 Jan 2006 16:01:05 -0800, " wrote:
Paul Corfield, Many thanks for the explanation. Not a problem although even I am beginning to lose the will to live and I have a staff pass. The level of public confusion is not acceptable. As a lawyer, used to some pretty complicated concepts, I still find the whole Oyster thing mind-boggling, and the more I learn about it (to say nothing of having to explain to some jobsworth where I got on and where I am going to, should the reader have failed to register my Oyster, and the traceability of my journey, which is nobody's business but mine) the less I want to have to do with it. I'll still be buying One Day Travelcards at my corner shop for the foreseeable future. Much simpler all round - and simple proof of payment for the taxman. When the concept is boiled down to its basic elements and some examples of how things like validities and capping work are provided it is not that hard. I do think people need to be able to work it through for themselves in order to have confidence in the underlying systems and processes. I don't really see how that is being achieved or will be achieved. It is, however, necessary. You're obviously entitled to your view about privacy but I have no real issue about that information being captured by TfL. Perhaps that's because I know how the system was designed and partly because I work for TfL and can't see how they can use the information in some malign way. I think Oyster is a good product and that Londoners will accept it once the current obstacles to its effective use are removed. It just needs more work and a better response from the staff who administer it. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
In message , Paul Corfield
writes I think Oyster is a good product and that Londoners will accept it once the current obstacles to its effective use are removed. I agree, but the fact remains that the majority of London commuters use surface rail rather than exclusively TfL services, and many are people (like me) who work mainly from home and need to commute only once or twice a week or less. Until Oyster is properly accepted for all surface rail journeys in the capital, it will for many of us remain an interesting but irrelevant exercise. -- Paul Terry |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
On Wed, 04 Jan 2006 18:11:26 +0000, Paul Corfield
wrote: On Wed, 4 Jan 2006 00:43 +0000 (GMT Standard Time), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: In article .com, (Richard Adamfi) wrote: If you think it is a con, blame the TOCs for not accepting Oyster, rather than Ken/TfL. The TOCs were forced by the Government not to adopt Oyster because it was not Standards-compliant. This is news to me - where did you get this snippet of information from? The standards problem has been in the railway press - probably in Modern Railways and elsewhere. Oh and what standards? Integrated Transport Smartcard Organisation ones: http://www.itso.org.uk If the TOCs were to go ahead and fit Oyster, there could be a problem if and when ITSO-compliant cards are in widespread use everywhere else. People arriving in London would discover that the card they use to buy transport tickets, in libraries or for school dinners (etc) couldn't be used in London, and Londoners would find they couldn't use their Oyster cards on National Rail ITSO systems outside London. Fitting duplicate systems at every station would be wasteful, but Oyster won't be used beyond London, and so the railways are meant to use inter-operable ITSO cards which would work with everyone else's systems. Is Oyster technology proprietory, or can anyone get the specs and make their own kit if they want? -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
"Arthur Figgis" ] wrote in message
... On Wed, 04 Jan 2006 18:11:26 +0000, Paul Corfield wrote: On Wed, 4 Jan 2006 00:43 +0000 (GMT Standard Time), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: In article .com, (Richard Adamfi) wrote: If you think it is a con, blame the TOCs for not accepting Oyster, rather than Ken/TfL. The TOCs were forced by the Government not to adopt Oyster because it was not Standards-compliant. This is news to me - where did you get this snippet of information from? The standards problem has been in the railway press - probably in Modern Railways and elsewhere. Also mentioned by the mayor here http://mqt.london.gov.uk//public/question.do?id=12553. I can see where the TOC's are coming from on this issue, it seems Livingston is insisting they pay for the 'retailing and validation capability' of oyster installation in stations when the dft is developing (presumably still a work in progress) a separate system for the rest of the UK, which they will be installing a few years later. And then here http://mqt.london.gov.uk//public/question.do?id=13087 Livingston lays down the costs. TfL is hardly short of cash, if £60m is all it would take for implementation why can't he just get on with it?. He's not exactly known for being prudent and to argue over a relatively small project (cost wise) with such large potential benefits seems incredibly petty. |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
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Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
In article , (Paul Corfield) wrote:
On Wed, 4 Jan 2006 00:43 +0000 (GMT Standard Time), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: In article .com, (Richard Adamfi) wrote: If you think it is a con, blame the TOCs for not accepting Oyster, rather than Ken/TfL. The TOCs were forced by the Government not to adopt Oyster because it was not Standards-compliant. This is news to me - where did you get this snippet of information from? Oh and what standards? Read Uncle Roger (Ford) in Modern Railways, repeatedly, and learn. Oyster is not ITSO-compliant and the DfT, who pay the TOC bills, won't pay for non-ITSO-compliant kit. Figures. Luckily, moves to make Oyster ITSO-compliant seem to be progressing at last. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
Is pay-per-use Oystercard cheaper than... an annual travelcard?
In article , ] (Arthur Figgis) wrote:
Is Oyster technology proprietory, or can anyone get the specs and make their own kit if they want? I believe Transys own it. The government's problem with Oyster is the risk of supplier lock-in. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
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