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#31
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In article .com,
alex_t wrote: Ah, the Jubilee - there is nothing better then constant announcements that "This train terminates at Stratford" when ALL trains terminate at Stratford. They don't all teminate at Straford; some of them terminate at Stanmore, so the announcments are useful to infrequent travelers who might like to be reassured that they got on a train going the right way. Even if you pretend that noone could make a mistake like that, some trains eastbound will be terminated at West Ham or other locations if they are turned short. Sometimes, if one finds oneself on a train that isn't going all the way, the choice of station to wait for the next train can make a difference to the ease of the interchange, particularly for those with heavy luggage - for example, if an Eastbound trains is turned short at North Greenwich, you are probably better waiting at Canary Wharf for the next train to Stratford as that'll avoid 2 flights of stairs at Greenwich. -- Shenanigans! Shenanigans! Best of 3! -- Flash |
#32
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In article ,
Ernst S Blofeld wrote: The classic is the "... line has been part suspended due to a *customer* under a train ...". It is good to see the customer relationship being valued even in such trying circumstances. At the point they're under the train, they're not going to go very far on LuL services, so calling them a passenger is a bit much. And while I might prefer "selfish idiot", it seems a bit unfair to label folk thus when most of them are ill, and the remainder careless. -- Shenanigans! Shenanigans! Best of 3! -- Flash |
#33
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Mike Bristow wrote:
In article , Ernst S Blofeld wrote: The classic is the "... line has been part suspended due to a *customer* under a train ...". It is good to see the customer relationship being valued even in such trying circumstances. At the point they're under the train, they're not going to go very far on LuL services, so calling them a passenger is a bit much. And while I might prefer "selfish idiot", it seems a bit unfair to label folk thus when most of them are ill, and the remainder careless. You've missed the point. Calling them a *passenger* is equally as ridiculous. It is the fact there is a *person* under a train that is the problem - their status or relationship with TfL is irrelevant to the disruption. ESB |
#34
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On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 20:40:14 +0100, Paul Corfield wrote:
Anyway, the point is that many other mass transit systems do not announce the destination if the destination is the end of the line and most trains usually go there. The announcements only made when the destination is unusual. LUL for some reason uses more railway-like announcements, which is understandable on some lines, but rather strange on others. Many lines on other networks are end to end and have no overlapping service patterns or branches. London has those in abundance and therefore information has to be provided. Certain other networks do make announcements about destinations, interchanges and safety announcements - Hong Kong MTR makes them in three languages for every stop including telling you what side the platform will be on at the next stop. Actually, that's a good example of only making the announcement in the case of something unusual. The MTR uses left-hand running with mostly island platforms, so most platforms are on the right-hand side of the train. If the next station has its platform on the left side, the announcement is made that "doors will open on the left". If its platform is on the right side, *no* announcement about this is made. I think people are forgetting that the security situation and assessment of risk to the tube network means that certain things *have* to be said. You only need to look at the impact of security alerts on the service just because people have left bags, boxes and other items lying around. The fact people leave them behind warrants a reminder! But it surely only works if the reminder takes place just as they are leaving their belongings behind. Is there any empirical evidence that these announcements actually make a difference? |
#35
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![]() "alex_t" wrote in message oups.com... And don't tell me that you think that all those excessive "security" or "important" announcements are actually needed. TRANSEC - Transport Secuity Agency do. There is a minimum requirement from them to play security announcements every 10 minutes. If service information changes shortly after one being played, you will invariably hear another security announcement before the 10 minute standard as even the most modern PA systems provided do not allow you to change one message whilst the system is running with others. You have to stop all messages, insert your new recording then queue them all up to play again. |
#36
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On 11 Jul, 12:36, Mike Bristow wrote:
might prefer "selfish idiot", it seems a bit unfair to label folk thus when most of them are ill, and the remainder careless. Not always , some people have been pushed. Usually by some nutter who hasn't taken their medication because it stops them hearing the pixies. B2003 |
#37
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On Tue, 10 Jul 2007, Paul Corfield wrote:
I think people are forgetting that the security situation and assessment of risk to the tube network means that certain things *have* to be said. You only need to look at the impact of security alerts on the service just because people have left bags, boxes and other items lying around. The fact people leave them behind warrants a reminder! If *and only if* those announcements are actually effective. The whole point of the whinge is that because people hear them every five minutes every day, they tune them out, and they have no effect. If this is true, the announcements are a Bad Thing; if not, they're a Good Thing. Until someone points us to a study which actually determines this, we're all ****ing in the wind. I'm sure I will now get lambasted for "defending" what everyone seems to hate. Yep! ![]() tom -- Come on thunder; come on thunder. |
#38
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Tom Anderson wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007, Paul Corfield wrote: I think people are forgetting that the security situation and assessment of risk to the tube network means that certain things *have* to be said. You only need to look at the impact of security alerts on the service just because people have left bags, boxes and other items lying around. The fact people leave them behind warrants a reminder! If *and only if* those announcements are actually effective. The whole point of the whinge is that because people hear them every five minutes every day, they tune them out, and they have no effect. If this is true, the announcements are a Bad Thing; if not, they're a Good Thing. Until someone points us to a study which actually determines this, we're all ****ing in the wind. Don't know if there have been any specific studies about those announcements. But it has long been axiomatic in human factor research that too many warnings causes people to start ignoring the warnings. You could repeat the notice "This is a security announcement: Please do not leave personal belongings unattended" every few minutes. If it is ignored you are no worse off than not making the announcement from the point of view of leaving bags unattended. But when you have a really important security announcement, lots of people will ignore it. I know that at my local station when I hear "this is a special announcement" it means just the opposite and I can safely tune out. -- Michael Hoffman |
#39
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Recently I was a witness of evacuation from Stratford station (because
of "customer under a train"). About half of the people did not evacuate until they were told that by station staff - they totally ignored the announcements. Of course it was usual Stratford crowd, so you can argue that they just did not understand the announcement as it wasn't in Polish :-) |
#40
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alex_t wrote:
Recently I was a witness of evacuation from Stratford station (because of "customer under a train"). About half of the people did not evacuate until they were told that by station staff - they totally ignored the announcements. If the station staff were in the habit of yelling "please do not leave your bags unattended" every 10 minutes they probably would have been ignored too. -- Michael Hoffman |
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