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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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![]() R.C. Payne wrote: jonmorris wrote: If every company could buy a working system 'off the shelf' then it wouldn't be that much a problem to do. You don't have one person (especially not a Government) trying to install it on buses, tubes, trains, coaches etc - you have a recognised standard, then any number of companies can produce the equipment to work with it. Every operator can brand their own smartcards, but they are still interchangeable. If the card system held credit, like Oyster, you could operate a simple pay as you go system on anything - and why wouldn't that work abroad? Well, apart from the currency conversion issue until we get the Euro. Such a system could even be rolled out to taxis. Whoever debits the card gets the money (less a commission fee) rather like a credit or debit card (but unlike those, you can swipe in/out at gates etc). Isn't this what ITSO is all about? Establish a standard for the cards and the station hardware that any manufacturer can make, that will be interoperable. The problem with Oyster is it is a proprietary system, made by one consortium, so they are a monopoly supplier. Effectively, it becomes an e-cash system. Funnily enough, Oyster had visions of their card working for loads of things - which presumably fell down when it became clear that outside of the transport industry, there probably wasn't much interest in installing the equipment. My understanding is that the Octopus card in Hong Kong, which is similar to Oyster, is used for non-transport purchases like sweets and newspapers. It may just take time, but I could imagine the kiosks on underground stations being a good place to start. Makes you wonder why they would separately try to introduce ID cards given that, once cash stops being accepted in most places, these smart cards would effectively become a licence to exist that could be withdrawn if the authorities don't like you. And you won't be able to buy toilet roll without it being recorded in a database, let alone travel somewhere. I don't really relish this kind of future. But it's the "security" implications of being able to track all our movements and purchases that may eventually get it funded, not travel convenience. |
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