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"elyob" wrote in
: SNIP They now want £5 to buy an England shirt to guarantee entry for the World Cup. "No-one without a shirt is getting in". Sod that then ... I'm not paying a pound a match. Or £1.67 if England don't do as well as some expect. Or just 71p if England go all the way. |
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Dave Arquati wrote:
I'm not an expert, but I imagine speed would be a problem. One of the advantages of Oyster is meant to be the speed at which the reading process is carried out (which is important for bus boarding - if almost all passengers board using Oyster, dwell times are noticeably lower). If the process always had to involve comms with a central computer, I guess the process would be slower. Indeed - that's why it's a semi-batch operation even on ticket gates. Trouble with buses is that that batch operation only takes place once a day and with constraints imposed by how it's done (with the driver modules). Saying that, the new AVL system for buses will add in a whole lot of comms functionality on board buses, so regular communication to update the on-vehicle computer will be feasible. I believe it is under consideration to involve Oyster in this. Neil |
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On 15 May 2006 05:16:47 -0700, "John B" wrote:
Phil Clark wrote: This having to check in at a Tube station is a real pain. You can top up on line - but again have to check in at a tube station to collect it. It's particularly a pain for people like me who live outside London and therefore can't top up at a local newsagent. How do you enter London, then? If by train, presumably there's a Tube connection at whichever mainline terminus you arrive into...? There is, and you're right that I usually use the tube on my oyster and can collect an auto top-up at a tube ticket gate. However, in June I'm going to be travelling to and from Kingston for a few days and will be using buses. |
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