WelshBluebird
Established Member
- Joined
- 14 Jan 2010
- Messages
- 5,230
Although hoping that the trials fail does effectively equate to that. Or are you suggesting that that is a practical response?
Hm. I think you might want to have a closer read of someone's posts!
Absolutely, I'd prefer that too. Indeed, if we aren't having other wholesale changes I find it a bit strange we're going for a whole other load of different ways of issuing and designing tickets, but then such is 'mother railway'...
In terms of hoping the trials fail, I read that comment as the trials regarding flimsy paper tickets. Personally I hope they fail too and ToC's realise that receipt style tickets just are not up to the job, and so go back to the drawing board and come up with a new solution which uses more durable ticket stock.
By using standard paper though, there are almost certainly many off the shelf printers available from the likes of Zebra. Much easier and than having to develop custom hardware for unique paper size and type.
I'd have thought a logical solution would be to use paper tickets for singles/returns/ one day tickets plus a smart card and app for season tickets.
As for the barcode scanners, they sound very like the system which Eurostar has been using for years. That seems to work we!l enough with both print at home and normal tickets.
Which is great for the ToC and all that, but really not good at all for the passenger who now will have a much higher chance of his/her ticket not being valid because it has become illegible.
For one day tickets (so normal singles, day returns, day travel tickets etc) then while I still do not like the regression from where we are now, I agree that it is just about acceptable to use receipt style tickets. But for period returns they simply are not good enough IMO.
In terms of barcodes I have no problem with that being a new way of reading the ticket (instead of the mag strip). Hell perhaps we will actually get to a situation where the actual ticket restrictions can be encoded on there and staff can see all the restriction text when scanning the ticket. Imagine how much better that will be!