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West Yorkshire Bus July 3rd 07 06:16 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
I have just come back from a trip to London and am wondering, am I
right in thinking that there are no walk in travel centres like I've
come to expect elsewhere in the UK anywhere in London

The Travel Information Centres that TfL advertise seem to be no more
than a glorified tube station ticket window or bus station inspector's
window. You have to ask for what publicity you want and then you have
to know what to ask for, and I'm sure they don't like giving out any
more than 1 or 2 items per person

Also whereas Tube maps are available in the racks at all tube
stations, it is very hard to find any bus maps on display anywhere.

In fact bus information is hard to find in general, once you get to a
bus stop you've got all the info, but before that there doesn't seem
to be any printed material showing even how often a bus runs. The
'Continuing your journey from' leaflets are a good idea but again
there's nothing that says if the services listed are every 4 minutes
or every 30 minutes. In my opinion it would also be a good idea to
include the bus line maps as found in bus shelters in these leaflets

It is also ironic how the only information about buses that is
available to take away is produced by London Underground and only
available at tube stations

Considering TfL seem to at least from a visitor's point of view have
it all sorted, these issues seem strange, I would have thought that
TfL would have a huge budget to spend on all kinds of maps and
leaflets

Andrew


Phil Richards July 3rd 07 08:06 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
West Yorkshire Bus wrote:
I have just come back from a trip to London and am wondering, am I
right in thinking that there are no walk in travel centres like I've
come to expect elsewhere in the UK anywhere in London

The Travel Information Centres that TfL advertise seem to be no more
than a glorified tube station ticket window or bus station inspector's
window. You have to ask for what publicity you want and then you have
to know what to ask for, and I'm sure they don't like giving out any
more than 1 or 2 items per person


The one at Victoria is a walk-in office off the mainline station
concourse. However the staff still sit behind glass screens...

--
Phil Richards, London, UK
3,600+ railway photos since 1980 at:
http://europeanrail.fotopic.net
http://britishrail.fotopic.net

Paul Corfield July 3rd 07 08:30 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 18:16:51 -0000, West Yorkshire Bus
wrote:

I have just come back from a trip to London and am wondering, am I
right in thinking that there are no walk in travel centres like I've
come to expect elsewhere in the UK anywhere in London

The Travel Information Centres that TfL advertise seem to be no more
than a glorified tube station ticket window or bus station inspector's
window. You have to ask for what publicity you want and then you have
to know what to ask for, and I'm sure they don't like giving out any
more than 1 or 2 items per person

[snip]
Considering TfL seem to at least from a visitor's point of view have
it all sorted, these issues seem strange, I would have thought that
TfL would have a huge budget to spend on all kinds of maps and
leaflets


To call it strange is an understatement. I cannot fathom TfL's approach
to bus information at all and I find the absence of decent, high quality
travel centres to be bizarre. As an example of better practice
elsewhere Lothian Buses manage to run 3 shops in central Edinburgh
including one which is open on Sundays and it does a very good passing
trade from observations earlier this year. Timetables are all on display
and available for you to take - to get a moderately decent map you had
to ask and again there is no "integrated" transport map showing all
buses and trains which is a big gap for me. TfL travel info centres are
often open 7 days in the centre of town but as you say they are not what
you call welcoming and information leaflets appear to have the status of
a trade secret. Quite how so many people manage to use the bus network
with next to no easy to use information to hand I don't know.

TfL seem to assume that everyone has internet access and has scrapped
anything resembling decent portable information on its bus services.
Local guides have been scrapped, decent timetables have been scrapped
and the quadrant bus maps were threatened with withdrawal and I
personally believe they will go sooner rather than later. The approach
seems to centre on "simple" information being provided at stops but stop
specific timetables are often inaccurate and in my view utterly
unhelpful. I have lost count of the people who look at the one at my
local stop and then come away mystified as to when their next bus will
turn up - this is because it says something stupid like every 9-11
minutes rather than actually tell them buses come at 07,17,27,37,47 and
57 minutes past the hour (which is what the real contracted timetable
does actually say).

Having the Journey Planner is all well and good but it is not a
substitute for a decent guide to services that people can carry with
them or consult at their leisure. I happened to pick up a copy of
Brighton and Hove's "Bus Times" guide at the weekend. This is a
comprehensive and excellent guide to Brighton's buses. There are full
clear timetables, fares information, bus type info, very detailed bus
maps, accessibility information for every route and a mini route map for
every service at the head of the timetable. There is also good
integration information with rail services and info on special bargain
tickets, Plus Bus and other initiatives. I thought it was an excellent,
well pitched document that is easy to read and understand and which a
"novice" bus user could easily use to get them using bus services. As a
potential visitor to the Brighton it is nice to have all the necessary
info to hand if I decide I want to travel around by bus and I also know
that there tickets I can buy in advance that mean I don't have to fumble
for money for each bus ride.

Now if only TfL could spend some of their financial surplus on doing
something like that for respective areas of London and getting it
through people's letter boxes and available on buses, in bus stations
and at tube / railway stations I would be very happy indeed. Instead
there is a load of money being spent on "personal travel plans" and
other such stuff which may yield benefits in time but which seem a very
expensive way of engaging with the travelling public.
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!



brixtonite July 3rd 07 09:24 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Jul 3, 9:30 pm, Paul Corfield wrote:



unhelpful. I have lost count of the people who look at the one at my
local stop and then come away mystified as to when their next bus will
turn up - this is because it says something stupid like every 9-11
minutes rather than actually tell them buses come at 07,17,27,37,47 and
57 minutes past the hour (which is what the real contracted timetable
does actually say).


Does every route have a specified tmetable like this? To be honest
I'm glad that the exact times aren't given on most routes in inner
London during the daytime, since the buses can't stick to them very
closely. (Night buses, and infrequent suburban buses are a different
matter).
But saying buses run every 9-11 minutes is equally bizarre, since
obviously there are plenty of times when you get two buses together
and then nothing for fifteen minutes: 'every ten minutes' is a more
sensible thing for the timetable to say, since '9 - 11' implies
greater accuracy. What is one to make of a timetable that says buses
run 'every 8 - 12 minutes' at some times, and 'every 9 - 10 minutes'
at others?





Neil Williams July 3rd 07 09:56 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 14:24:59 -0700, brixtonite
wrote:

But saying buses run every 9-11 minutes is equally bizarre, since
obviously there are plenty of times when you get two buses together
and then nothing for fifteen minutes: 'every ten minutes' is a more
sensible thing for the timetable to say, since '9 - 11' implies
greater accuracy. What is one to make of a timetable that says buses
run 'every 8 - 12 minutes' at some times, and 'every 9 - 10 minutes'
at others?


That in the first case you need to leave an extra 12 minutes for your
journey in case you miss one? I'd prefer a real timetable so far as
possible (and I realise it isn't necessarily feasible in congested
parts of London).

Neil

--
Neil Williams
Put my first name before the at to reply.

John Rowland July 3rd 07 10:50 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
Paul Corfield wrote:

I cannot fathom TfL's
approach to bus information at all and I find the absence of decent,
high quality travel centres to be bizarre.


Unless they've closed recently, there are decent bus information centres
dotted around. Harrow bus station, Turnpike Lane bus station and North
Greenwich spring to mind. I've always found the offices at Liverpool Street,
Victoria and Euston useful. Canning Town too.



Paul Corfield July 4th 07 05:30 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 14:24:59 -0700, brixtonite
wrote:

On Jul 3, 9:30 pm, Paul Corfield wrote:



unhelpful. I have lost count of the people who look at the one at my
local stop and then come away mystified as to when their next bus will
turn up - this is because it says something stupid like every 9-11
minutes rather than actually tell them buses come at 07,17,27,37,47 and
57 minutes past the hour (which is what the real contracted timetable
does actually say).


Does every route have a specified tmetable like this? To be honest
I'm glad that the exact times aren't given on most routes in inner
London during the daytime, since the buses can't stick to them very
closely. (Night buses, and infrequent suburban buses are a different
matter).
But saying buses run every 9-11 minutes is equally bizarre, since
obviously there are plenty of times when you get two buses together
and then nothing for fifteen minutes: 'every ten minutes' is a more
sensible thing for the timetable to say, since '9 - 11' implies
greater accuracy. What is one to make of a timetable that says buses
run 'every 8 - 12 minutes' at some times, and 'every 9 - 10 minutes'
at others?


Yes every service has a real contractual timetable.

A non TfL website has quite a lot of info here

http://www.londonbusroutes.net/details.htm

Click on the route number in the big list to bring up the timetable if
one is available. Note TfL no longer officially produce or publish
proper timetables - IMO it's shameful that a private individual is left
to provide this sort of valuable info for one of the great world cities.

Depending on how frequent a service then service performance may be
measured either on keeping buses running to the broad frequency (for
what TfL call high frequency routes) or to the scheduled timetable (for
low frequency routes)

More info here

http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/businessan...reports/#faqs2

If my bus service ran every 5 minutes and did so reliably then I really
wouldn't care about a timetable. However I object to being left to just
wander to a bus stop to wait up to 12 minutes just because TfL can't be
bothered to tell me the minutes past the hour a bus runs. Only when
frequencies reach every 15 minutes or less frequently do they put up the
minutes past the hour at the stop. It is also worth noting that many
bus frequencies are not that high early in the morning or late in the
evening even on trunk routes running from Central London.

I recognise things can go wrong and buses do diverge from the timetable
and that's fine if I have access to good information to allow me to make
more informed choices. As I cannot take any decent TfL produced
information with me I have to spend a load of time researching all
possible options before I leave and then scribble them down so if I am
making lots of journeys on unfamiliar services (as I did visiting some
gardens open under the National Garden Scheme the other Sunday). This is
a pain in the posterior - why can't I just pop to a travel info centre
and ask for the timetable leaflets or buy a timetable book? Strange
that even my least favourite commercial operators outside of London can
manage to do this relatively easily.

Overall I think the TfL bus network is pretty damn good but the whole
approach to passenger information I cannot stand.

--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!

Paul Corfield July 4th 07 05:46 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 23:50:07 +0100, "John Rowland"
wrote:

Paul Corfield wrote:

I cannot fathom TfL's
approach to bus information at all and I find the absence of decent,
high quality travel centres to be bizarre.


Unless they've closed recently, there are decent bus information centres
dotted around. Harrow bus station, Turnpike Lane bus station and North
Greenwich spring to mind. I've always found the offices at Liverpool Street,
Victoria and Euston useful. Canning Town too.


To be strictly correct they are little offices with a person stuck
behind a sheet of glass - if someone is in the office. My local bus
station - Walthamstow - is not too bad and they do have some little
racks outside the office that they stock up with the quadrant bus maps.
Plenty of people pick them up but this seems to be a local initiative.
I have yet to see anyone at the North Greenwich or Turnpike Lane offices
so therefore it's impossible to get at any of the information they may
have. Stratford sometimes has a person in the office but they prefer to
ignore you if you want something but they'll arrest you if happen to
point a camera at a bus. Harrow and Canning Town I've not been to for a
long time so cannot comment. The other places you list are TICs and
again the whole presentation of these places is unfriendly.

London has nothing on a par with the best of PTE or even bus company
practice where there is something like a shop that is well laid out with
easy to access information and an open counter area where people are not
imprisoned behind glass. I appreciate there may be legitimate security
issues at some locations but not at all of them. I've been to the West
Midlands several times over the last year and found the Centro offices
to be very good with excellent leaflet and map displays and helpful
staff. Other PTEs are also good in this respect and make a decent
effort in their new bus stations to provide such facilities.

I used to work in a Tyne and Wear PTE Travel Office many years ago and I
know how popular that facility was. We had loads of regular customers
and not just for coach and excursion tickets. People used to ask when
new timetable books and maps were being published and we would have
queues of people waiting to buy them. We often ran out of such
publications and kept having to get new stock in. I know life has moved
on a bit since those days but I remain convinced that personal service
and convenient provision of information in a wide range of forms is the
best way to communicate with your customers / passengers. "Having a
relationship with your customers" is one of the marketing buzz phrases
these days - well way back in the 1980s we had that in Tyne and Wear.

You might imagine that TfL might have decided to dedicate some space at
the LT Museum shop to provide a good quality information outlet for TfL
services but no. The shop itself is nicely done given the constraints
of the site and clearly there is a push to exploit the LT / TfL brand
for all its worth - shame it doesn't translate into the approach of
"selling" the core business of buses, tubes, DLR and trams.
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!

Neil Williams July 4th 07 07:54 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 18:30:37 +0100, Paul Corfield
wrote:

Overall I think the TfL bus network is pretty damn good but the whole
approach to passenger information I cannot stand.


Agreed, with the exception of the spider maps and the display of
numbers and directions on the stop, both of which are very useful and
almost completely absent in other parts of the UK.

Indeed, an official Government document (that I found somewhere hidden
away on one of the Traveline sites) states that numbers on the flag
are "time consuming and expensive". That they might be, but the
effort is worth it.

Neil

--
Neil Williams
Put my first name before the at to reply.

West Yorkshire Bus July 4th 07 08:42 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On 4 Jul, 18:46, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 23:50:07 +0100, "John Rowland"

wrote:
Paul Corfield wrote:


I cannot fathom TfL's
approach to bus information at all and I find the absence of decent,
high quality travel centres to be bizarre.


Unless they've closed recently, there are decent bus information centres
dotted around. Harrow bus station, Turnpike Lane bus station and North
Greenwich spring to mind. I've always found the offices at Liverpool Street,
Victoria and Euston useful. Canning Town too.


To be strictly correct they are little offices with a person stuck
behind a sheet of glass - if someone is in the office. My local bus
station - Walthamstow - is not too bad and they do have some little
racks outside the office that they stock up with the quadrant bus maps.
Plenty of people pick them up but this seems to be a local initiative.
I have yet to see anyone at the North Greenwich or Turnpike Lane offices
so therefore it's impossible to get at any of the information they may
have. Stratford sometimes has a person in the office but they prefer to
ignore you if you want something but they'll arrest you if happen to
point a camera at a bus. Harrow and Canning Town I've not been to for a
long time so cannot comment. The other places you list are TICs and
again the whole presentation of these places is unfriendly.

London has nothing on a par with the best of PTE or even bus company
practice where there is something like a shop that is well laid out with
easy to access information and an open counter area where people are not
imprisoned behind glass. I appreciate there may be legitimate security
issues at some locations but not at all of them. I've been to the West
Midlands several times over the last year and found the Centro offices
to be very good with excellent leaflet and map displays and helpful
staff. Other PTEs are also good in this respect and make a decent
effort in their new bus stations to provide such facilities.

I used to work in a Tyne and Wear PTE Travel Office many years ago and I
know how popular that facility was. We had loads of regular customers
and not just for coach and excursion tickets. People used to ask when
new timetable books and maps were being published and we would have
queues of people waiting to buy them. We often ran out of such
publications and kept having to get new stock in. I know life has moved
on a bit since those days but I remain convinced that personal service
and convenient provision of information in a wide range of forms is the
best way to communicate with your customers / passengers. "Having a
relationship with your customers" is one of the marketing buzz phrases
these days - well way back in the 1980s we had that in Tyne and Wear.

You might imagine that TfL might have decided to dedicate some space at
the LT Museum shop to provide a good quality information outlet for TfL
services but no. The shop itself is nicely done given the constraints
of the site and clearly there is a push to exploit the LT / TfL brand
for all its worth - shame it doesn't translate into the approach of
"selling" the core business of buses, tubes, DLR and trams.
--
Paul C

Admits to working for London Underground!


These are the comparisons between London and in my case West Yorkshire
that I can't understand

I did visit the Victoria station info centre and was faced with a
pokey little office with staff behind windows, no leaflets on display
and a queue of people stretching out of the door, so I wasn't going to
queue for leaflets

Compare this with Leeds City Bus Station where you've got staff sat at
a counter and open racks with timetables for every bus in Leeds and
maps for all of West Yorkshire. Similar situations apply in Manchester
(although staff sit behind glass) and South Yorkshire (SYPTE's new
travel centres are even more relaxed)

I would have used the buses more frequently whilst in London but I
only managed to find a Central London map late into my visit that
happened to be available in the racks at a tube station somewhere, and
even then there is no guide to how often the services actually run

Regarding the lack of timetables, I understand that frequent services
don't run to time but there should still be timetables (like First do
for Overground bus routes) that say something like

0515, 0545, 0610, 0630, 0640 Then at least every 10 minutes until
1920, 1935 then at least every 15 minutes until 2245, 2310

Even if they didn't do that, a simple frequency guide would help. I
can't believe that there is nothing in print that says how often a
service runs

Considering the Underground is pretty much at full capacity and there
is no room for increases in capacity, they should promote the buses
more


stephen July 5th 07 12:26 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
Paul Corfield wrote:
On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 18:16:51 -0000, West Yorkshire Bus
wrote:

I have just come back from a trip to London and am wondering, am I
right in thinking that there are no walk in travel centres like I've
come to expect elsewhere in the UK anywhere in London

The Travel Information Centres that TfL advertise seem to be no more
than a glorified tube station ticket window or bus station inspector's
window. You have to ask for what publicity you want and then you have
to know what to ask for, and I'm sure they don't like giving out any
more than 1 or 2 items per person

I think I must be living in an alternative London.

Every bustop I use has a timetable for all the routes that stop there, a
diagram of the routes, and usually a spider map of the routes in the
area and a map of night buses.

I've never come accross a tube station that hasn't had a bus map to hand
out, as well as on display.

And a variety of maps can be downloaded from the website.

Admittedly, this is Central London - where was it that you couldn't find
information?

sr

John Rowland July 5th 07 02:23 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
Paul Corfield wrote:

Overall I think the TfL bus network is pretty damn good but the whole
approach to passenger information I cannot stand.


Come to think of it, every tube station seems to have a rack of boat
timetables, but no bus map. I suppose LU views buses as competition, but
boats as something that people will visit by tube.



asdf July 5th 07 03:46 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 13:26:11 +0100, stephen wrote:

I think I must be living in an alternative London.

Every bustop I use has a timetable for all the routes that stop there,


Not a timetable (i.e. something that tells you what times the buses
come), just a frequency guide (i.e. something that says useful things
like "every 2-15 minutes").

a diagram of the routes, and usually a spider map of the routes in the
area and a map of night buses.


But no actual street map showing what actual roads the bus travels
along (and where you can change to other bus routes, and where those
go).

Besides, as mentioned elsewhere in the thread, this info is only
available *after* you've already reached the bus stop you're supposed
to be travelling from. What about when you're planning your journey?

And a variety of maps can be downloaded from the website.


The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the new
website. If I hadn't already known they existed and made a determined
effort (5+ minutes), I'd probably never have found them. And
apparently, even they are under threat and may get the chop soon.

(5 years ago, a poster version of them was displayed at every bus
stop, along with "you are here" arrow. How things have declined since
then.)

Peter Smyth July 5th 07 05:17 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 

"asdf" wrote in message
...

And a variety of maps can be downloaded from the website.


The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the new
website. If I hadn't already known they existed and made a determined
effort (5+ minutes), I'd probably never have found them. And
apparently, even they are under threat and may get the chop soon.


In that case you need some new glasses.

1. Go to www.tfl.gov.uk
2. Click on buses
3. Click on bus route maps

Seems like a fairly logical place to put them.

Peter Smyth



asdf July 5th 07 06:30 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 18:17:25 +0100, Peter Smyth wrote:

And a variety of maps can be downloaded from the website.


The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the new
website. If I hadn't already known they existed and made a determined
effort (5+ minutes), I'd probably never have found them. And
apparently, even they are under threat and may get the chop soon.


In that case you need some new glasses.

1. Go to www.tfl.gov.uk
2. Click on buses
3. Click on bus route maps

Seems like a fairly logical place to put them.


Now that's odd - the "buses" link in step 2 doesn't appear in Opera,
although it does in IE.

Anyway, the way I tried to find them was equally logical, apart from
the thing that actually worked:

1. Go to www.tfl.gov.uk
2. Click on "maps" (top-right corner)
3. Click on "bus route maps"
4. As none of the other links on the page look relevant, spend ages
looking through the alphabetical listings for them (which incidentally
contain the night bus spider maps for NE and SW London, but not NW or
SE London - why?), unsuccessfully
5. As a last resort, click "bus and tram" on the left-hand side of the
screen, which unexpectedly takes you straight to the quadrant maps.

Paul Corfield July 5th 07 06:53 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 15:23:07 +0100, "John Rowland"
wrote:

Paul Corfield wrote:

Overall I think the TfL bus network is pretty damn good but the whole
approach to passenger information I cannot stand.


Come to think of it, every tube station seems to have a rack of boat
timetables, but no bus map. I suppose LU views buses as competition, but
boats as something that people will visit by tube.


I really don't think anyone in LU sees buses as competition to the tube.
I've never heard that expressed and given we all report back to TfL I
can't see that such an attitude would be tolerated. I think it is back
to the lack of promotion of the bus network as a companion to the rail
and tube network.

When the old style Local Bus Guide was put in the tube racks at Seven
Sisters or Walthamstow Central it would be whipped out of the racks very
quickly as people clearly wanted the information. The same happens with
the London Connection Map - One had put a load of them in their racks at
Walthamstow yesterday (I picked one up myself) and today they are all
gone while all other leaflets are still there. From very simple
observations I would say there is a real demand for network forms of
information and yet there is so little of it produced. Something
different has to be done if people really are to be persuaded / pushed
out of their cars and on to public transport.

If you were to say that many people in LU know very little about the bus
network and how it works and where it goes then I would agree with that.
I could surmise that the same would be true if you asked people in
Surface Transport (buses) about how LU works although they would be a
bit more familiar with the basics of the tube map (like many people)
given its prominence and their familiarity with it.
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!

Tom Anderson July 5th 07 07:20 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, asdf wrote:

On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 13:26:11 +0100, stephen wrote:

I think I must be living in an alternative London.

Every bustop I use has a timetable for all the routes that stop there,


Not a timetable (i.e. something that tells you what times the buses
come), just a frequency guide (i.e. something that says useful things
like "every 2-15 minutes").


Also, not terribly portable, unless you have a spanner with you.

a diagram of the routes, and usually a spider map of the routes in the
area and a map of night buses.


But no actual street map showing what actual roads the bus travels along
(and where you can change to other bus routes, and where those go).


I still reckon this could be added to the spider maps without too much
trouble.

And a variety of maps can be downloaded from the website.


The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the new
website.


And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!

tom

--
It not infrequently happens that something about the earth, about the sky,
about other elements of this world, about the motion and rotation or even
the magnitude and distances of the stars, about definite eclipses of the
sun and moon, about the passage of years and seasons, about the nature
of animals, of fruits, of stones, and of other such things, may be known
with the greatest certainty by reasoning or by experience. -- St Augustine

Richard J. July 5th 07 08:09 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
Tom Anderson wrote:
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, asdf wrote:
The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the
new website.


And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!


You haven't tried very hard!

EITHER:
Go to the TfL site, enter "high frequency services" in the search box,
and the first item in the results is a PDF file of the map.

OR:
Go to the TfL site, click on "Getting Around", then click on "Maps", and
a link to the HFS map is there under "Popular maps".

OR (if you want to cheat):
http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/HFS_Quad1g.pdf

--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)


Tom Anderson July 5th 07 08:57 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, Richard J. wrote:

Tom Anderson wrote:
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, asdf wrote:
The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the
new website.


And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!


You haven't tried very hard!

EITHER:
Go to the TfL site, enter "high frequency services" in the search box, and
the first item in the results is a PDF file of the map.

OR:
Go to the TfL site, click on "Getting Around", then click on "Maps", and a
link to the HFS map is there under "Popular maps".

OR (if you want to cheat):
http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/HFS_Quad1g.pdf


I sit corrected. I *swear* that wasn't there last week!

tom

--
It not infrequently happens that something about the earth, about the sky,
about other elements of this world, about the motion and rotation or even
the magnitude and distances of the stars, about definite eclipses of the
sun and moon, about the passage of years and seasons, about the nature
of animals, of fruits, of stones, and of other such things, may be known
with the greatest certainty by reasoning or by experience. -- St Augustine

Peter Smyth July 5th 07 10:00 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 

"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
.li...
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, Richard J. wrote:

Tom Anderson wrote:
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, asdf wrote:
The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the
new website.

And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!


You haven't tried very hard!

EITHER:
Go to the TfL site, enter "high frequency services" in the search box,
and the first item in the results is a PDF file of the map.

OR:
Go to the TfL site, click on "Getting Around", then click on "Maps", and
a link to the HFS map is there under "Popular maps".

OR (if you want to cheat):
http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/HFS_Quad1g.pdf


I sit corrected. I *swear* that wasn't there last week!


You're right! It has been added since 30th June.

http://web.archive.org/web/200706301...ound/1106.aspx

Peter Smyth



Fig July 5th 07 10:24 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 19:30:24 +0100, asdf wrote:

On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 18:17:25 +0100, Peter Smyth wrote:

1. Go to www.tfl.gov.uk
2. Click on buses
3. Click on bus route maps

Now that's odd - the "buses" link in step 2 doesn't appear in Opera,
although it does in IE.


That pages looks identical to me in:

Opera 9.21
IE 6.0
IE 7.0
Firefox 2.0
Netscape 7.01
Safari 3.0
All on Win XP.

Additionally, the page doesn't appear to do any browser sniffing it merely
uses conditional comments to send style sheets to various IE versions to
rectify bugs in that browser.

What version of Opera and OS are you using?
--
Fig

Richard July 5th 07 10:41 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 21:57:16 +0100, Tom Anderson
wrote:
And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!


I sit corrected. I *swear* that wasn't there last week!


I thought that as well...

I really like that map, although some kind of hint about which London
terminal a line goes to would be good. I would use the pastel colours
for this, rather than show the zones, and then it could conceivably
replace the traditional underground map (which also has no zones) as
displayed in stations, etc., to give more of an appearance of an
integrated network.

Richard.

Michael Hoffman July 5th 07 11:38 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
Richard wrote:
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 21:57:16 +0100, Tom Anderson
wrote:
And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!

I sit corrected. I *swear* that wasn't there last week!


I thought that as well...

I really like that map, although some kind of hint about which London
terminal a line goes to would be good. I would use the pastel colours
for this, rather than show the zones, and then it could conceivably
replace the traditional underground map (which also has no zones) as
displayed in stations, etc., to give more of an appearance of an
integrated network.


I agree.
--
Michael Hoffman

asdf July 6th 07 04:16 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 23:24:33 +0100, Fig wrote:

1. Go to www.tfl.gov.uk
2. Click on buses
3. Click on bus route maps

Now that's odd - the "buses" link in step 2 doesn't appear in Opera,
although it does in IE.


That pages looks identical to me in:

Opera 9.21
IE 6.0
IE 7.0
Firefox 2.0
Netscape 7.01
Safari 3.0
All on Win XP.

Additionally, the page doesn't appear to do any browser sniffing it merely
uses conditional comments to send style sheets to various IE versions to
rectify bugs in that browser.

What version of Opera and OS are you using?


This is in Opera 9.20 on Windows 2000. (Not my machine so I can't
upgrade to 9.21 to try that.)

The top row of links (Tube Rail Buses DLR) doesn't appear. If (with
the page open) you switch to another application then back to Opera,
the links mysteriously appear, but you still can't click on them or
highlight the text.

West Yorkshire Bus July 6th 07 09:25 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 

You have to wonder why there are the big differences between the
Underground and Buses. With Buses all the info is available at the bus
stops or online, but on the Underground they still produce those
pocket 'tube maps' that are available at every station

Why haven't they decided to scrap them because the tube map is
available on posters at the station and online? If it useful to have a
tube map to take away why not bus information?


Michael Hoffman July 6th 07 10:45 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
West Yorkshire Bus wrote:
You have to wonder why there are the big differences between the
Underground and Buses. With Buses all the info is available at the bus
stops or online, but on the Underground they still produce those
pocket 'tube maps' that are available at every station

Why haven't they decided to scrap them because the tube map is
available on posters at the station and online? If it useful to have a
tube map to take away why not bus information?


I think the cost of the pocket Tube Maps is defrayed by advertising. But
I don't see why they couldn't do the same for buses.
--
Michael Hoffman

Fig July 8th 07 10:09 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 17:16:17 +0100, asdf wrote,
with reference to http://www.tfl.gov.uk/
The top row of links (Tube Rail Buses DLR) doesn't appear [using Opera].
If (with
the page open) you switch to another application then back to Opera,
the links mysteriously appear, but you still can't click on them or
highlight the text.


Just managed to recreate the bug here.
It appears to be dependant on the position of the links relative to the
viewport at page load.
I'll bring it up on the Opera forums so that we can narrow it down and get
a bug report filed.

--
Cheers,
Fig

Tom Anderson July 9th 07 05:50 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, Peter Smyth wrote:

"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
.li...
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, Richard J. wrote:

Tom Anderson wrote:
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, asdf wrote:
The proper (quadrant) maps are now very difficult to find on the
new website.

And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!

You haven't tried very hard!


I sit corrected. I *swear* that wasn't there last week!


You're right! It has been added since 30th June.


*******S!

tom

--
X is for ... EXECUTION!

Tom Anderson July 9th 07 05:53 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007, Richard wrote:

On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 21:57:16 +0100, Tom Anderson
wrote:

And it *still* doesn't have the High Frequency Services map at all!


I sit corrected. I *swear* that wasn't there last week!


I thought that as well...

I really like that map, although some kind of hint about which London
terminal a line goes to would be good.


Slightly tricky when some stations and lines have trains to multiple
termini. Shouldn't be impossible, though, and would definitely be useful.

In fact, this highlights a problem with the map: a station with 2 tph to
Victoria and 2 tph to London Bridge counts has having 4 tph, and so being
high-frequency. However, in reality, only one of those services is likely
to be useful to you, so you've effectively got just 2 tph.

tom

--
X is for ... EXECUTION!

Mr Thant July 9th 07 06:31 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Jul 9, 6:53 pm, Tom Anderson wrote:
Slightly tricky when some stations and lines have trains to multiple
termini. Shouldn't be impossible, though, and would definitely be useful.


Have you seen the Overground Network map:
http://web.archive.org/web/200601250...etwork-map.pdf

(the ON website was taken down a few months ago. I presume the signage
can't be far behind)

There's also this classic Southern map that uses a similar concept:
http://www.virtualportmeirion.com/network/largemap.htm

U

--
http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/


Tom Anderson July 9th 07 07:09 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Mon, 9 Jul 2007, Mr Thant wrote:

On Jul 9, 6:53 pm, Tom Anderson wrote:

Slightly tricky when some stations and lines have trains to multiple
termini. Shouldn't be impossible, though, and would definitely be useful.


Have you seen the Overground Network map:
http://web.archive.org/web/200601250...etwork-map.pdf


I have; i quite like that one, i have to say. It's more than just a
recolouring of the London Connections map, though, and i think i'm right
in saying that for the low-frequency lines, it doesn't indicate
destination (Epsom Downs, for instance - does that join the green line
that goes to Victoria, or the one that goes to West Croydon?); i guess
that since these lines are loew-frequency anyway, they don't matter so
much.

Now, who wants to have a go at photoshopping the Lon Con map to include
this scheme? :)

Oh, hang on, i'm forgetting something:

http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/system...LC_May_x05.pdf

NR's own version of London Connections, which shows lines coloured by
operator. It's ugly as sin, but it does almost do the job. You just need
to split the Southern and Southeastern lines, and the orbital lines from
their related radials.

There's also this classic Southern map that uses a similar concept:
http://www.virtualportmeirion.com/network/largemap.htm


Ooh, i think i've seen that one before, but a long time ago. Yes, that
really is good, in a rather overcomplicated way.

Maybe the solution to the Gordian map problem is just to simplify the
service patterns!

tom

--
Human judgement is not something to be trusted in a life-or-death
situation -- Ben Jefferys

Paul Scott July 9th 07 09:07 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 

"Mr Thant" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Jul 9, 6:53 pm, Tom Anderson wrote:
Slightly tricky when some stations and lines have trains to multiple
termini. Shouldn't be impossible, though, and would definitely be useful.


Have you seen the Overground Network map:
http://web.archive.org/web/200601250...etwork-map.pdf

(the ON website was taken down a few months ago. I presume the signage
can't be far behind)


I thought it looked a bit stale when I saw it a few months ago, but I see
www.overgroundnetwork.com now redirects to TfL's homepage. I was wondering
what would happen to the platform signs, because they are basically quite
useful, in a similar format to LU line maps. I guess they could remain with
some sort of minor rebranding, but to what? I believe South London Metro has
already been tried...

I wonder if http://www.overground.co.uk is a cybersquatter?

There's also this classic Southern map that uses a similar concept:
http://www.virtualportmeirion.com/network/largemap.htm


That shows quite well how little the network has really changed - I guess
the blue line to Holborn Viaduct from Sevenoaks sould be dusted off again
for Thameslink - I think its one of the intended routes?

Paul





Richard J. July 9th 07 10:25 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
Paul Scott wrote:
"Mr Thant" wrote in
message
oups.com...

(the ON website was taken down a few months ago. I presume the
signage can't be far behind)


I thought it looked a bit stale when I saw it a few months ago, but
I see www.overgroundnetwork.com now redirects to TfL's homepage. I was
wondering what would happen to the platform signs, because they
are basically quite useful, in a similar format to LU line maps. I
guess they could remain with some sort of minor rebranding, but to
what? I believe South London Metro has already been tried...

I wonder if http://www.overground.co.uk is a cybersquatter?


I don't think so. It was registered in 1998 by Overground Radio
Promotions of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, who seem to be in the music business.
TfL might be interested in their use of the roundel though.
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)



Paul Scott July 10th 07 10:50 AM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 

"Richard J." wrote in message
. uk...
Paul Scott wrote:
"Mr Thant" wrote in
message
oups.com...

(the ON website was taken down a few months ago. I presume the
signage can't be far behind)


I thought it looked a bit stale when I saw it a few months ago, but
I see www.overgroundnetwork.com now redirects to TfL's homepage. I was
wondering what would happen to the platform signs, because they
are basically quite useful, in a similar format to LU line maps. I guess
they could remain with some sort of minor rebranding, but to what? I
believe South London Metro has already been tried...

I wonder if http://www.overground.co.uk is a cybersquatter?


I don't think so. It was registered in 1998 by Overground Radio Promotions
of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, who seem to be in the music business. TfL might be
interested in their use of the roundel though.


Fair point. Maybe they should ask TfL to stop using the name for a railway
line though...

Paul



Jarle H Knudsen August 21st 07 10:26 AM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Sun, 08 Jul 2007 23:09:02 +0100, Fig wrote:

On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 17:16:17 +0100, asdf wrote,
with reference to http://www.tfl.gov.uk/
The top row of links (Tube Rail Buses DLR) doesn't appear [using Opera].
If (with
the page open) you switch to another application then back to Opera,
the links mysteriously appear, but you still can't click on them or
highlight the text.


Just managed to recreate the bug here.
It appears to be dependant on the position of the links relative to the
viewport at page load.
I'll bring it up on the Opera forums so that we can narrow it down and get
a bug report filed.


Did you get any response?

--
jhk

Fig August 21st 07 09:19 PM

Travel Centres/Bus info
 
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 11:26:51 +0100, Jarle H Knudsen wrote:

On Sun, 08 Jul 2007 23:09:02 +0100, Fig wrote:

On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 17:16:17 +0100, asdf
wrote,
with reference to http://www.tfl.gov.uk/
The top row of links (Tube Rail Buses DLR) doesn't appear [using
Opera].
If (with
the page open) you switch to another application then back to Opera,
the links mysteriously appear, but you still can't click on them or
highlight the text.


Just managed to recreate the bug here.
It appears to be dependant on the position of the links relative to the
viewport at page load.
I'll bring it up on the Opera forums so that we can narrow it down and
get
a bug report filed.


Did you get any response?


My apologies. Although I did a bit of experimenting here at the time, I
neglected to post to the community.
I have now. http://my.opera.com/community/forums....pl?id=2209457

--
Fig


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