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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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Paul Corfield wrote:
On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 16:29:37 +0100, "Graham Harrison" wrote: Waiting for a North London train a couple of days ago the station person (what are they called these days?) came down onto the platform carrying what looked like a mobile phone. He went behind the side of the shelter and appeared to hold the "mobile phone" to the fence (the fence was creosoted a very dark colour). He appeared to do the same thing in more than one place on both platforms. When I looked there was a black "stud" (only word I can think of) which was simply inserted into the fence panel - it wasn't a fastener, there was not a post or anything behind the panel. Is there any significance to his actions? The "studs" are almost certainly a location identifier that the hand held unit will read. By holding the unit against the stud it shows he has been to the area as part of a planned inspection. Bar codes can also be used. I have seen building security staff use this system to prove they've undertaken their rounds. LUL is trialling something similar to be able to record the fact that hourly security checks around the station have been completed. We had a system like this at work - referred to as a "Deister". I presume they are the manufacturers. -- MatSav |
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