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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Apr 3, 4:13*am, Neil Williams wrote:
On Apr 2, 6:56*pm, wrote: It used to be the ticket agent at a US station would call the dispatcher to get train status. *But now some won't bother. The sort of stations we're talking about won't have any staff at all, let alone a ticketing agent... ![]() In the US some carriers are installed electronic displays at unattended stations to provide information. One time at a SEPTA station the indicator said the train was on-time, but there was no train. As time went on, the indicator said the train was late--but simply the number of minutes past due. It appeared to be simply counting upward from the schedule as opposed to indicating the actual projected late arrival time. Also, computerized PA [public address] announcements are used. Several times at a SEPTA station they announced a train would be delayed just when the training was pulling into the station--on time. On the River Line, sometimes the automated 'next station' announcement gets ahead of itself and announces a station further down the line rather than the one coming up next. It seems that computerized indications, which are 'supposed' to be more accurate, are less accurate than manual arrangements. On the NYC subway, the automated professional-voice announcements sound classy at first, but after a while becoming very irritating, kind of like being stuck in a weird 1960s sci-fi movie. |
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