I had taken it as read that the depot printer would be networked, and on the same LAN as the driver's device. If the driver has received an alert on the roster system, they evidently have access to the IT System.
Driver receives alert, reviews sheets, sends back any queries/challenges if needed or acknowledges/accepts the sheets, then prints the sheets from the system direct to the depot's networked printer (or possibly requires to export to PDF first and then print that, adds about 1 minute). Printer scans work ID card (with typed login backup) and then can print off any or all jobs in the list for that driver.
This doesn’t happen everywhere. In my case I have no work device, hence no way of accessing IT to print anything. The “roster system” is the daily sheets being displayed three days in advance (which the drivers of course distribute by WhatsApp these days). The diagrams themselves are printed the day before with any relevant amends and left at the booking on point.
No reason it couldn’t work as above but there is no time allocated in the booking on process for drivers to print diagrams, plus you’d have issues with the printer breaking down and several needing to use it at once. So printing everything the day before just works better.
Notably my last TOC did issue devices for notices etc., but we still had centralised printing of diagrams.
Not really, just that I don't understand why you would use paper, ink and administrators' time printing, scanning and attaching things to emails, printing them again at depots and then sending them on (by hand? by train? by car?) to the other locations when the computer where they are originated could send them to be printed at those locations without any human intervention. Better still, the recipients could receive them as emails and print them out if they needed a hard copy. Another advantage of emails is that you can have an audit trail to see if they've been read
AIUI they’re produced on whatever software is used, distributed electronically by email and then only physically printed at the local depot.
I get why electronic devices are banned in some driving cabs, but surely drivers can be professional enough to keep the diagram up on their tablets and not get distracted while driving?
The policy needs updating first - currently devices are banned in all but limited circumstances, and not all drivers have devices! A paper diagram is also arguably more useful for highlighting stops, annotating with formation length, unit numbers etc.
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