Those of you unconvinced of the benefits of Twitter may soon be converted.
Those canny boys and girls over at Chiltern are "offering Twitter followers the perfect gift for Father’s Day – a train cab ride on our infamous bubble car."
The Fact Compiler, whilst not convinced that a bubble car can be 'infamous', has already entered!
UPDATE: This, unbelievably, 'twittered' to The Fact Compiler by a very slick Chiltern...
We used the word "infamous" with a sense of irony.
This is an amazing prize for one lucky dad.
We all love the bubble car!
Good effort - nice use of technology.
Tuesday, 16 June 2009
Chiltern blows bubbles on Twitter
Guest Post: Railways and social media #2
Monday's guest post from Ben Smith on how the railways might use social media attracted considerable interest amongst readers.
Brendan Nelson, a consultant who works for Tobias & Tobias, helped FCC to deliver the Twitter service that Ben mentioned in his post.
Brendan has asked if he might share his view with Eye readers.
Yes he may and here it is:
A number of rail companies have already responded to Ben Smith's guest column on June 15th, which argued that rail companies are failing to exploit social media.
However, as one of those behind the First Capital Connect Twitter service Ben singled out as "getting it wrong", I thought I'd chip in with my own two cents.
Twitter users subscribe to, or "follow", any number of other Twitter accounts. The more accounts a user "follows", the more information they receive - and the more difficult it becomes to sift through the incoming stream of information.This information overload poses a challenge to train operators looking to use Twitter. They generate a lot of data, most of which the average customer will find irrelevant. For example, customers travelling between Brighton and London Bridge at 6pm aren't interested in incidents at Stevenage close to midnight.
So if all this data is simply piped through a Twitter feed, its "followers" will have to deal with a high noise-to-signal ratio: the vast majority of messages will be of no relevance. This issue of relevance was the problem we set out to solve with FCC's Twitter service.
Our users state their journey preferences so that the system can send alerts when - and only when - relevant incidents occur. This is the fundamental difference between @FirstCC and @uktrains, which adopts more of a broadcast model. Followers of @uktr_firstcc might receive at least nine irrelevant messages for each relevant one.
Another strength of the "targeted" model is that our system uses Twitter's "direct message" feature, which means users receive emails and potentially SMS messages when alerts are sent. All this is free of charge.
Ben says that we miss the "social" aspect of Twitter. But I feel the social aspect is intrinsic to Twitter itself and users will forward on information that they feel is important - even if it came to them as an official, targeted communication. And a quick look at conversations on Twitter confirms that passengers don't need encouragement to talk about train services.
So while @uktrains has its strengths, I believe that - by solving the problem of relevance - our model does as well.
Just as bulletin boards didn't make email obsolete, the public conversations taking place on Twitter won't make official, targeted communications obsolete either.
ATOC tramples roughshod over heritage line
Oh dear.
ATOC's exciting Connecting Communities Report already appears to be falling apart under public scrutiny.
Readers will recollect that the report was widely leaked over the weekend before being officially unveiled on Monday to much media fanfare and misty eyed recollections of pre-Beeching days.
But it would appear that much of its thinking is back of the fag packet stuff, judging by this story in the Herald Express...
THE steam railway company which runs Churston Station says it has not been consulted over new plans to reconnect the line with the mainline route to Newton Abbot.
Andrew Pooley, general manager of Paignton and Dartmouth Steam Railway, says the company has not been involved in compiling the report, which singles out the old Brixham line as one of 14 which should be reopened nationwide.
And he says the idea 'has not been thought through'.
Indeed.
Perhaps surprising that ATOC didn't bother consulting with the heritage line before publishing a report that proposes using its infrastructure for new services.
Doubly so, as the report was written by the former chairman of another heritage railway in the South West.
Is the Eye alone in fearing that ATOC is now more interested in spin than substance?
GC introduces 12,000hp on ECML?
Exciting news from The Reporter, the Ciras newsletter.
Following a reader concern about the length of some Grand Central HST sets The Reporter sagely announces: This presumably explains Grand Central's much improved reliability in recent months?
Nexus "not being privatised".
One of the bidders for the Tyne & Wear Metro may be about to drop out according to NEBusiness:
Last night The Journal was informed of rumours one bidder was preparing to pull out of the bidding process, a claim Nexus said it could not comment on.
There are currently four bidders for the Tyne & Wear metro concession: Deutsche-Bahn, Serco-Ned Rail, MTR Corporation and an in-house Nexus team.
Tyne Bridge MP David Clelland, who as a member of the transport select committee should know better, claimed that Nexus "...is not being privatised".
Which means that he is either deluded or that the smart money is on the in-house team.
Monday, 15 June 2009
Lookalike XX - NR abreast of the situation...
Good news for West Coast Main Line Passengers.
According to PR Week:
Network Rail has appointed Iris to handle an integrated consumer PR and advertising campaign... to showcase Network Rail’s £9bn upgrade of the West Coast main line.
Indeed and very splendid the ad is too.
Much to the chagrin of Virgin, who would rather the £2.4m campaign spend had been used to deliver a reliable railway.
But what's this?
Has NR appointed Iris as part of a charm offensive to win over Virgin's top man?
As regular readers of Eye will recollect Sir Beardie is very fond of being pictured with ladies in various states of undress.
As Iris also handle Wonderbra the potential for joint PR could be breath taking.
NESA on line, but not for long?
Network Rail has spent enormous amounts of time and money creating a National Electronic Sectional Appendix (NESA).
And a jolly good thing it is too.
But what's this?
To view NESA on-line you need to download the SVG Viewer from Adobe.
Alas - when you visit the download page it carries the following sorry message:
Please note that Adobe has announced that it will discontinue support for Adobe SVG Viewer on January 1, 2009.
Always good to see one legacy system replaced by another.
IT consultants, bonuses and trebles all round!
UPDATE: This from Tom over at Blairwatch (which hasn't been updated since 8th May!):
A tad harsh - SVG is an open standard with plenty of viewer support around the place, as NR make clear.
Now, if NR had used some kooky format that you had to pay Microsoft squillions to interpret, I'd have been up for giving them a good kicking, but using SVG is common sense.
Now all we need is open access to NR's geographic data in some interestingly queryable form, plus the postcode database, the Ordnance Survey data etc... etc...
Car scrappage
***The First Secretary announced that from the end of April until 7th June more than 60,000 car buyers have been given a £2,000 discount for scrapping vehicles more than 10 years old.***
The disturbing case of the missing NIR
Telegrammed by 221b Baker Street
'I say, Holmes, what do you make of the disturbing case of the Pacer engine, found near Olive Mount junction?
'Watson, you will of course have noted the significance of RAIB's investigation and the detail of the event contained in the NIR.'
'But Holmes, RAIB is not investigating and there has been no NIR!'
'That, Watson, is the significance!'
UPDATE: The NIR has apparently now been published and RAIB are involved!
Open Access: Railways and social media
They're a necessary evil - the rubbish bit between breakfast and getting to the office (and yes, I'm looking at you Southwest Trains into Waterloo...). It's not a problem with the idea of mass-transit - I like to save the planet as much as the next man - it's just the sense of futility when things go wrong.
Following the snowy disruption of early February and a day spent manually updating the accounts with extra reports two things became apparent: travellers were willing and able to report disruption long before the existing services could and Twitter was better able to withstand heavy loads than the train operators' websites which crashed in response to the unusually high numbers of visitors .
I quickly added a feature to 'crowd source' disruption alerts and the users (several thousand now) embraced it enthusiastically.
The power of social media is the 'social' bit - on the @uktrains service people report disruption alongside the BBC's data to create a much richer picture of travel conditions and everyone benefits... (and no-one pays)
Not only could they cheaply improve customer service by moving into the places online where their customers are (like this blog), the replies and comments directed at the @uktrains service (even by those who understand it's not official) give a rich insight into customers' views on their travel providers (good and bad).
UPDATE: This just in from Rudi over at Merseyrail...
Can't give you the details yet but we are planning to start using Twitter in the not too distant future to supply our passengers with travel information and keep them up to date with any disruption on Merseyrail.
Mind you, with PPM above 97%, there isn't all that much to tell them...
UPDATE: And this from John over at ATOC...
We now have a feed on Twitter for the entire National Rail network and will soon have live feeds on a TOC by TOC basis.
This is better than the existing UK Trains feed not least because they are getting their information from the BBC Travel News website which – you’ve guessed it – gets its information from us via a 3rd party.
Our view is that it’s better for passengers to hear things straight from the horses mouth as it were.
UPDATE: The Fact Compiler begs to differ...
It's fine to hear it from the horse's mouth, as long as free sources of information continue
This encouraging news posted by Shane Richmond over at Telegraph Blogspots:
The Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) announced today that it is investigating complaints about National Rail Enquiries' handling of real-time train information in regard to My Rail Lite, the free iPhone application that was removed from the iTunes App Store earlier this year after a licensing dispute.
If trains are late why should passengers pay to be told of the railway's incompetence?
UPDATE: Ben responds to ATOC...
John says ATOC's twitter feed is better than @uktrains because they are the original source for the official disruption information...
I disagree because he doesn't mention crowd-sourcing, but regardless this is brilliant news (if not about 12 months late), but where is it?
Google/Twitter searches found nothing and it's not linked from their sites very visibly (if at all).
The whole point is @uktrains barely took 2 days to build - telling people about it so it actually helps them has been far more important.
Saturday, 13 June 2009
ATOC issues old record
Deep breath.
It would appear that private sector Train Operating Companies want to reopen lots of stations!
This from the Sunday Telegraph...
The Association of Train Operating Companies is due to give unprecedented backing to the restoration of disused track and the reintroduction of passenger services on other routes which currently only carry freight.
Excitingly ATOC members propose using taxpayers money to do this rather than their own.
No matter.
The list of lines is strangely familiar...
Lines... include the Uckfield to Lewes line in East Sussex, the Bristol to Portishead line and Yorkshire's Harrogate-Ripon-Northallerton route... the restoration of the Manton Curve in Rutland... while reopening the Woodhead line from Manchester to Sheffield...
Can it be?
This is surely an echo of Railtrack's 2000 Network Management Statement?
Is Michael taking up Gerald's mantle?
Careful, there is no Woolworths left to move to.
UPDATE: This just in from Leo Pink...
Gerald Corbet is now at LRC, where they specialise in ensuring that F***-ups don't have embarrassing results.
How come he was overlooked to be NR's new Chairman?
Bin laiden?
A naughty reader has sent Eye the following picture:Amusing captions invited.
Unless of course it is just a bin at Fort William?
UPDATE: A very quick response from 'No trace at all'..."Dave bin in?"
Very droll, can anyone do better?
Lord Adonis - prove Gordon right
After a febrile couple of weeks Gordon Brown now assures us that his administration is listening to the people.
Denied the General Election that the country so obviously needs the Eye is prepared, just this once, to give him the benefit of the doubt.
So to My Lord Adonis, Secretary of State for Transport, falls the honour of proving that the Government is indeed listening.
According to the Yorkshire Post yesterday:
"NINETY-FOUR per cent of people taking part in a Sheffield Council poll say they are opposed to the introduction of ticket barriers at Sheffield railway station, which would prevent people using the railway bridge to access the city centre.
To date 4,000 people have voted on the Sheffield City Council website.
So Andrew - are you listening?
Rumble in the bungle
Good news for Scott Wilson.
According to Building magazine:
"Scott Wilson has emerged as the big winner from the latest round of contracts awarded by Crossrail to help design the £16bn London rail scheme."
But what's this?
Can this be the same Scott Wilson that undertook an assessment of noise and vibration prior to the opening of the Stirling-Alloa-Kincardine (SAK) route for Clackmannanshire Council?
An assessment that was subsequently heavily criticised by engineering consultancy Arup, for failing to follow "standard practice".
Hopefully environmental impact assessments won't form part of their new Crossrail work.
UPDATE: This from Dan...
Could that be the same Arup that competes aggressively with Scott Wilson for the same contracts?
The phrase "They would say that, wouldn't they" springs to mind.
Thank you Dan. So Scott Wilson did follow "Standard Practice" then?
Lost and found #1
Found!
One Pacer engine from yesterday's 19.37 Blackpool to Liverpool service.Discovered trackside between Broadgreen station and Wavertree Technology Park
Perhaps Northern or Angel could get in touch.
Thursday, 11 June 2009
A riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma
Telegrammed by the Velopodist
I wonder if your readers can help me to solve a puzzle.
The Rail, Maritime and Transport Union insists its strike on London Underground is solid and that its members have all supported it.
They can't be lying, so it's either all Aslef drivers out there driving trains or, as the RMT claims, management who are exaggerating how many trains are running.
Yet services do seem to be running on the Victoria Line, where nearly everyone is an RMT member.
What can be going on?
UPDATE: This just in from Events, Dear Boy, Events...
Certainly it was delightful yesterday on the Vic, where I at 1230hr I was able to stretch out in a carriage with three other people.
I assume the rest of London was on the Northern Line where they were counting on a rival ASLEF service.
But the light blue line seemed pretty healthy from Seven Sisters (where I understand Bob was on picket duty himself according to the Standard) as far south as Victoria.
Ghostly experience.
A new era unfurls #2
Virgin West Coast PPM on Wednesday 10th June 2009
55.9%.
"A new era will unfold on the West Coast Main Line" Iain Coucher, December 2008
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
A new era unfurls #1
Good news for the freight community.
Today saw the official opening of Telford International Railfreight Terminal.
Shadow Secretary of State for Transport, Theresa Villiers, travelled from London to do the honours.
Alas.
Her train was delayed by signalling problems on the West Coast Main Line.
Perhaps surprising considering that Network Rail's rather splendid £2.4m advertising campaign was commissioned to celebrate the succesful conclusion of a £9bn upgrade.
No matter.
Iain Coucher boasted in December that "a new era will unfold on the West Coast Main Line".
Many are asking for the old one back.
For you ze football is over
As Gordon Brown prepares to meet the remaining members of England's 1966 World Cup winning squad at Downing Street today more good news from our passenger focused railway.
This from those nice people at DB owned Chiltern...
Please be aware that we will not be stopping any services at Wembley Stadium Station on 10 June, from 1200 until the end of service. We will unfortunately not be providing a service for those going to see the England game at Wembley Stadium.
The safety of both our regular passengers, and the additional travellers using our services because of the strike, is paramount, and we therefore have taken the difficult decision to withdraw services to Wembley on 10 June. Unfortunately this will also affect the evening journey of those who commute to/from Wembley Stadium station.
Typical of the Germans, bloody sore losers.