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#21
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On Aug 24, 1:53 pm, John B wrote:
I'm missing the 'non-trivial' element, here... A bus ticket machine is a fairly simple off-the-shelf gadget. You're proposing bolting on a relatively huge amount of new electronics for very little gain, plus the additional costs of maintaining it and payingt for bandwidth and so on. From a technological point of view you're right, it is trivial, but logistically and economically, no it isn't. You don't need it anyway. Online top ups have an overnight delay, so they could just upload details of top-ups to be collected while the bus is in the depot at night. I presume they've looked at this and found it's more trouble than it's worth, or not something they could keep working reliably, or not compatible with current working practices, or some other non-technological issue. U -- http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London |
#22
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John B wrote:
On 24 Aug, 11:31, Michael Hoffman wrote: The poor design element is that you can't validate on a bus, thereby making validation actually an issue instead of the non-issue it ought to be (yes, I know the excuses for this; however, it'd be trivially easy to make bus-based readers connect to the base by GPRS every five minutes to exchange relevant data with the central system). I think we have different definitions of "trivial." TfL has a secure private network in place to link the fixed Oyster readers to their central server. Companies have been able for many years to provide their employees and their employees' devices with VPN access over GPRS to their secure private networks. Integrating mobile devices with electronic peripherals is more or less a matter of plug- and-play. I'm missing the 'non-trivial' element, here... Hence why so many large IT projects go over budget and miss deadlines...? -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#23
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On Fri, 24 Aug 2007, Mr Thant wrote:
On Aug 24, 1:53 pm, John B wrote: I'm missing the 'non-trivial' element, here... A bus ticket machine is a fairly simple off-the-shelf gadget. You're proposing bolting on a relatively huge amount of new electronics for very little gain, plus the additional costs of maintaining it and payingt for bandwidth and so on. From a technological point of view you're right, it is trivial, but logistically and economically, no it isn't. Okay, hands up anyone here who's an electronic engineer. Anyone? No? So we're all more or less talking out of our collective hats, then? A mate of mine designed a system for trucks that monitors their position, speed, and brake use, and radios it back to base for tracking and maintenance management type stuff. It's a box with a GPS chipset, a GPRS chipset, some analogue-to-digital converters, and a microcontroller. I wouldn't say it was trivial, at all, but it was also not the kind of impossibility you make out. [1] You're right that it would add a fairly marginal amount of utility. But buses are going to have computers with GPRS (and GPS) soon enough anyway, for iBus, this kind of management-oriented telemetry, etc. Adding an interface to the Oyster mainframe at that point would be a matter of a ribbon cable and a few dozen thousand lines of code. tom [1] One of its effects is to make braking more efficient, which saves fuel; something like 2%, i think. It's installed on 5000 trucks, which means it's saving 100 trucks worth of fuel use; this friend accordingly doesn't feel guilty about his frequent intercontinental plane trips! -- As Emiliano Zapata supposedly said, "Better to die on your feet than live on your knees." And years after he died, Marlon Brando played him in a movie. So just think, if you unionize, Marlon Brando might play YOU in a movie. Even though he's dead. -- ChrisV82 |
#24
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Tom Anderson wrote:
On Fri, 24 Aug 2007, Mr Thant wrote: On Aug 24, 1:53 pm, John B wrote: I'm missing the 'non-trivial' element, here... A bus ticket machine is a fairly simple off-the-shelf gadget. You're proposing bolting on a relatively huge amount of new electronics for very little gain, plus the additional costs of maintaining it and payingt for bandwidth and so on. From a technological point of view you're right, it is trivial, but logistically and economically, no it isn't. Okay, hands up anyone here who's an electronic engineer. I'm a programmer, so I have a good idea of what "trivial" means in terms of even that aspect of the project. So we're all more or less talking out of our collective hats, then? Perhaps you are, if you say so. I'm not. A mate of mine designed a system for trucks that monitors their position, speed, and brake use, and radios it back to base for tracking and maintenance management type stuff. It's a box with a GPS chipset, a GPRS chipset, some analogue-to-digital converters, and a microcontroller. I wouldn't say it was trivial, at all, but it was also not the kind of impossibility you make out. [1] I don't think anyone has said what John has proposed is *impossible,* only that it is not *trivial* either. What you describe is in the same category. You're right that it would add a fairly marginal amount of utility. But buses are going to have computers with GPRS (and GPS) soon enough anyway, for iBus, this kind of management-oriented telemetry, etc. Adding an interface to the Oyster mainframe at that point would be a matter of a ribbon cable and a few dozen thousand lines of code. *Now* you're talking out of your hat. It would be nice to collect online top-up at any Tube station rather than having to nominate one. Or to allow collection without having to wait overnight. Either of these things would be a walk in the park compared to a GPRS-based system on the buses. Yet they are not done. It's not as easy as you think. As Richard J. points out IT projects are notorious for missing budgets and deadlines. I think no small part of this is due to overly optimistic assumptions at the outset. -- Michael Hoffman |
#25
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On Aug 20, 10:54 pm, Uncle Dave wrote:
Can anyone tell me how I can use myOysterCard on buses? TFL don't seem to want to - they hint at it, presumably expecting visitors to London to somehow understand how London transportation works. You are not alonhttp://www.ilfordrecorder.co.uk/content/redbridge/recorder/news/story.aspx?brand=RECOnline&category=newsIlford&tBr and=northlondon24&tCategory=newsilford&itemid=WeED 20%20Sep%202007%2009%3A33%3A33%3A853 quote Train users paying for Oyster card mix-up MARC WALKER - 20 September 2007 CONFUSED rail passengers are being hit with £20 on-the-spot fines after mistakenly thinking they can use their Oyster card on train services. Rail company One has pledged to extend the electronic ticketing system - which operates between Stratford and Liverpool Street - to Redbridge stations by May 2009. But in the meantime many commuters remain bewildered by the transport network. Barry Edwards, of Chelmsford Road, South Woodford, said he saw several people attempt to pass through barriers at Ilford station using their Oyster cards, only to be fined for fare dodging. He said: "There was a Polish student reduced to tears when an officer was trying to serve her a £20 penalty charge. "Transport for London has already paid the money to One Railway to take on the pre-payment system right up to Romford. If the money has been paid, why not wave them through?" A One spokesman confirmed that TfL will pay for the installation of Oyster payment barriers at stations in Ilford, Seven Kings, Goodmayes and Chadwell Heath - but denied that the company had already received the cash from City Hall. She said: "No money comes to us. TfL puts the equipment into the stations, but we will be paying for the maintenance." London Mayor Ken Livingstone has made no secret of his anger over train operators' reluctance to embrace Oyster. A TfL spokesman said: "We recognise the benefits to tens of thousands of passengers of a fully integrated transport smartcard, to pay for all forms of public transport across London. "Indeed, last May, the mayor offered £20million to pay for the provision and installation of Oyster across the national rail network in the capital. "All the train operating companies are in final discussion with TfL over the implementation of Oyster pay-as-you-go on their services. Agreement should hopefully be reached in the next few weeks. unquote: |
#26
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Bob wrote:
CONFUSED rail passengers are being hit with £20 on-the-spot fines after mistakenly thinking they can use their Oyster card on train services. Rail company One has pledged to extend the electronic ticketing system - which operates between Stratford and Liverpool Street - to Redbridge stations by May 2009. Well the paper's not helping to clear up the confusion is it?! "Oyster cards" CAN be used at Ilford BUT only the ones with season tickets on them - I've never had a problem here. What causes the confusion is the widespread use of "Oyster" when "Pay As You Go" is what is meant. |
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