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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Mon, 23 Apr 2007, MIG wrote:
On Apr 23, 9:52 pm, Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 23 Apr 2007, Paul Corfield wrote: On Mon, 23 Apr 2007 20:09:41 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: If the answers to these questions are both 'the vast majority', then LU should now have a massive amount of data about journeys being made on its network - in terms of where they start and end, at least. Actual hard numbers, not estimates or surveys of passenger density on each line. This would be really interesting to look at. Does it exist, is it public, and what would be my chances of getting it via FOIA? To be honest it is more valuable in some respects where it shows modal interchange or bus to bus interchange. The opportunities to better understand "total" journeys rather than just the rail element are more attractive and adjusting bus services to provide through or "round the corner" services is easier. Absolutely - although the lack of people touching *out* of buses is going to hamper this, at least at the finish of a rail-bus journey. That would kind of depend on the Oyster pad in a bus knowing where it was. Ha - yes, very true! The ticket gates usually stay where they are. Readers in trains along with some kind of GPS would save on the ridiculous going up the escalator situation when passing the boundary of your paper travelcard, Serves you right for having a paper travelcard ![]() Gates should be able to do this; say you have a Z12 paper travelcard and an oyster with some pre-pay, and you go from Z1 to Z4, when you want to get out at your destination, you should be able to stick your paper card in, have it rejected with an 'excess fare required' message, then touch your oyster to pay it. Well, that would be nice, anyway. but I don't if GPS would be reliable enough for something as variable as a bus. Back in the days before flat fares, buses knew roughly where they were - they needed to know what fare stage they were in for the machine to price the tickets. I think the driver had to push a button every now and then. There's currently some sort of beacon system on some routes, for tracking buses, but i don't know if it tells buses where they are. There's some sort of alleged 'iBus' system on its way which will provide accurate tracking of all buses: http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/96 It remains to be seen how well this will work. Also, we're still not going to have people touching out. Might be possible to install long-range card readers on the doors to track people getting out, but that's getting a bit crazy ... tom -- I don't wanna know your name, i just want BANG BANG BANG! |
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