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#11
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On 12/12/2012 23:54, Neil Williams wrote:
Mizter T wrote: I (genuinely) totally disagree with you - I think this will eventually become one of the so-called 'killer applications' that pushes the contactless card payment method into the mainstream. (And FWIW, I haven't got a contactless card in my wallet either!) I have two, and it means I have to get my Oyster out of my wallet now, while I used to be able to just bang the whole wallet on the reader. Depends on the reader, really. I have two contactless transport cards in my current Oyster card holder, one being an Oyster card, the other being from another city on the continent. I can bang them both together on some bus lines and fare gates, and the reader will read only the Oyster Card. Readers on other busses or fare gates will indicate that there is more than one card and that it can distinguish between the two. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#12
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In message
..net, at 23:54:15 on Wed, 12 Dec 2012, Neil Williams remarked: I agree, this will become a "killer app" - particularly for non-London bus companies who don't wish to spend a fortune on the infrastructure to do a PAYG smartcard Although some (not many) are using ITSO instead, which has the advantage that it works when you aren't paying (twirly card) and also supports season tickets. when the banks can do it for them. Who owns and runs the capping system? And that's not just a TfL sort of capping but bus companies where you buy an "all day" ticket, and then swipe in with it multiple times during the day. -- Roland Perry |
#13
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In message , at 22:49:44 on Wed, 12
Dec 2012, Barry Salter remarked: Chiltern are doing a limited experiment with contactless payment for Singles and Returns (including, strangely, Senior Railcard discounts, but *only* Senior Railcard discount) from Great Missenden to Marylebone. You can't just "touch in" at Great Missenden and out at Marylebone, instead you buy a "ticket" from a reprogrammed Parkeon Strada car park payment machine at Great Missenden, which prints a slightly modified car park type ticket. East Coast badly need contactless payment at their car park machines. Not only do you have to pay through the nose, but they are incredibly slow taking card payments currently. -- Roland Perry |
#14
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![]() "Recliner" wrote in message ... "tim....." wrote: "Mizter T" wrote in message ... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20694027 The timescale of this was what I asked about just two weeks ago, and voila it's here - not the full version by any means, as they'll be no capping initially, and it'll be some while longer before other TfL modes (Tube, DLR, LO etc) accept it, with no word yet on NR. So With only XX percentage of customers having a "contactless" bank card (I don't have one, and I have 3 bank cards in my wallet). Only usable on the bus and no capping even to the one day buss pass. I predict a complete failure of this experiment It's an experiment to test the technology in the real world, not to prove that large numbers of people will use this limited, first stage implementation. On that basis, it'll be a success if the technology works reliably, How will they know if it works reliably? No-one is going to complain if the don't get charged and few are going to notice if they are overcharged, so how are they going to measure the failure rate? tim |
#15
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![]() wrote in message ... On 12/12/2012 22:58, Mizter T wrote: On 12/12/2012 22:37, tim..... wrote: "Mizter T" wrote: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20694027 The timescale of this was what I asked about just two weeks ago, and voila it's here - not the full version by any means, as they'll be no capping initially, and it'll be some while longer before other TfL modes (Tube, DLR, LO etc) accept it, with no word yet on NR. So With only XX percentage of customers having a "contactless" bank card (I don't have one, and I have 3 bank cards in my wallet). Only usable on the bus and no capping even to the one day buss pass. I predict a complete failure of this experiment I (genuinely) totally disagree with you - I think this will eventually become one of the so-called 'killer applications' that pushes the contactless card payment method into the mainstream. (And FWIW, I haven't got a contactless card in my wallet either!) Will this eventually mean the demise of Oystercards? Only if they can find a politically correct way of forcing the unbanked to pay higher fares (who are mainly the young/poor). tim |
#16
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![]() wrote in message ... On 12/12/2012 22:37, tim..... wrote: "Mizter T" wrote in message ... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20694027 The timescale of this was what I asked about just two weeks ago, and voila it's here - not the full version by any means, as they'll be no capping initially, and it'll be some while longer before other TfL modes (Tube, DLR, LO etc) accept it, with no word yet on NR. So With only XX percentage of customers having a "contactless" bank card (I don't have one, and I have 3 bank cards in my wallet). Only usable on the bus and no capping even to the one day buss pass. I predict a complete failure of this experiment tim I thought that banks were starting to redistribute cards with the contactless feature, however. ITYF that they started this about 2 years ago I still don't have one (not by choice) tim --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#17
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![]() "Neil Williams" wrote in message ... Mizter T wrote: I (genuinely) totally disagree with you - I think this will eventually become one of the so-called 'killer applications' that pushes the contactless card payment method into the mainstream. (And FWIW, I haven't got a contactless card in my wallet either!) I have two, and it means I have to get my Oyster out of my wallet now, while I used to be able to just bang the whole wallet on the reader. But yes, I agree, this will become a "killer app" - particularly for non-London bus companies who don't wish to spend a fortune on the infrastructure to do a PAYG smartcard when the banks can do it for them. Is the bit that you are saving going to be significant? You're still going to have to have a reader in every bus. You still need to download the data each day to some central collation point. You need to provide some sort of intelligent ticketing - most rural bus companies offer discount returns. You'll need a "complaints" department to handle mis-reads. |
#18
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On Dec 13, 1:26*pm, "tim....." wrote:
"Neil Williams" wrote in message ... Mizter T wrote: I (genuinely) totally disagree with you - I think this will eventually become one of the so-called 'killer applications' that pushes the contactless card payment method into the mainstream. (And FWIW, I haven't got a contactless card in my wallet either!) I have two, and it means I have to get my Oyster out of my wallet now, while I used to be able to just bang the whole wallet on the reader. But yes, I agree, this will become a "killer app" - particularly for non-London bus companies who don't wish to spend a fortune on the infrastructure to do a PAYG smartcard when the banks can do it for them.. Is the bit that you are saving going to be significant? You're still going to have to have a reader in every bus. You still need to download the data each day to some central collation point. You need to provide some sort of intelligent ticketing - most rural bus companies offer discount returns. You'll need a "complaints" department to handle mis-reads. And if the bus service is curtailed - that is cut short of its destination - then when you board the bus behind you end up paying twice. That's a scam that TfL have been running for years. It nets them millions of pounds extra profit. Tourists are usually affected by this the most. CJB. |
#19
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Thu, 13 Dec 2012 06:31:24 -0800 (PST), CJB wrote: And if the bus service is curtailed - that is cut short of its destination - then when you board the bus behind you end up paying twice. That's a scam that TfL have been running for years. It nets them millions of pounds extra profit. Tourists are usually affected by this the most. CJB. As the bus network requires £400m subsidy a year (figure quoted by a Mr Peter Hendy in a recent London Assembly session) I struggle with the concept of TfL making "millions of pounds *extra* profit". I would also be grateful if you could point to the data that underpins your "interesting" [1] statement. You also need to be careful with words like "scam" which suggests deliberate intent to rip people off. however not fixing the OSI "bug" does seem to be deliberate. tim |
#20
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![]() On 13/12/2012 16:54, tim..... wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote: On Thu, 13 Dec 2012 06:31:24 -0800 (PST), CJB wrote: And if the bus service is curtailed - that is cut short of its destination - then when you board the bus behind you end up paying twice. That's a scam that TfL have been running for years. It nets them millions of pounds extra profit. Tourists are usually affected by this the most. CJB. As the bus network requires £400m subsidy a year (figure quoted by a Mr Peter Hendy in a recent London Assembly session) I struggle with the concept of TfL making "millions of pounds *extra* profit". I would also be grateful if you could point to the data that underpins your "interesting" [1] statement. You also need to be careful with words like "scam" which suggests deliberate intent to rip people off. however not fixing the OSI "bug" does seem to be deliberate. Nonsense. |
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