My blog received an email this morning from a T worker. It details the many problems that are going on and that concerns of T workers are being ignored at T Headquarters.
Please spread this letter around as every rider in the system should read it and demand answers.
A T worker pleads: Mr. Grabauskas, please come to my station
Please spread this letter around as every rider in the system should read it and demand answers.
A T worker pleads: Mr. Grabauskas, please come to my station
no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 12:28 am (UTC)it just boggles the mind how the mbta managed to royally f this thing up. every other major city i've been to has a card system, either swipe or RFID like the charliecard, and they have their hitches but nothing as grossly stupid as the charliecard. especially the way to add value to a charlieticket or card -- when my parents visit they are infuriated by the convoluted way required for them to just buy a "round trip" ticket -- 4 bucks. it's not clear at all how to do it.
before anyone jumps on me saying that the system is still new, etc etc., i was living in paris before, during, and after they implemented a very similar system called the NaviGO. it was a hell of a lot easier to figure out. recharge a monthly or weekly pass at a kios. if you want just to take a quick trip in and out of the city as a tourist, you are asked to input the trip numbers, not try to figure out what fare you owe.
boston, you're my home city, but cmon, we can do a lot better than this.
no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 01:55 am (UTC)I too was confounded by the convoluted way to buy a simple round trip pass. It is a case of bad interface design in the machines- to not offer what must be one of the most common needs: to get there and get back.
no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 02:01 am (UTC)I guess he wasn't a drunk...
I've lived here most of my life and always thought that the song was about some inebriated journey. Go figure. Let me tell you about my "Nights in White Satin" interpretation...
no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 02:16 am (UTC)Vote for walter o'brien!
no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 02:01 am (UTC)Hmm.
Date: 2007-01-25 02:31 am (UTC)So now I understand! He wasn't being an ass; he was being moved by some unseen hand hell bent on convincing Boston residents that THEY were the problem, not the MBTA infrastructure.
Anyhoo...I haven't really had any problems since, but my Porter to Harvard daily commute doesn't demand much of the T system.
I still don't understand why Charlie Tickets even exist when they could just put everything on the card. We put a man on the moon for chrissakes.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2007-01-25 02:52 am (UTC)The T really did have to introduce the Ticket first, because they had to remain compatible with the existing monthly pass system and its swipe-readers until all stations and fareboxes could be converted to Charlie.
I want Charlie Tickets
Date: 2007-01-25 04:32 am (UTC)Re: I want Charlie Tickets
Date: 2007-01-25 04:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-25 03:56 pm (UTC)Of course, it's likely that this isn't an accident. It's quite clear that the T would really like everyone to be using CharlieCards, and is trying to discourage people from buying one ride at a time, hence the fare discount for CharlieCard users. The gratuitous inconvenience of buying a CharlieTicket or paying cash for a bus ride fits into this as well. I don't know that it's deliberate, but I strongly suspect it.
If it is deliberate, it's completely asinine, even for the T. The T's job is not to dictate how people use the system, it is to understand how people prefer to use the system and make that as effortless as possible. Thus, the ticket machines should let you put in cash or swipe a credit card, then press the "Give me a CharlieTicket" button or the "Put this on my CharlieCard" button. Average transaction time, 5 seconds. And the fareboxes should let you dump in a handful of coins, like the old ones. (They can't let you swipe CharlieTickets like the old ones, because if it's a stored-value ticket it has to write the deduction to it, which requires a second pass over the heads.)
Now, the fact that the new fare gates make fare evasion easier, not harder, is just plain idiocy. The gates also really should swallow tickets once the fares are used up.
Where's my tinfoil hat^h^h^hwallet
Date: 2007-01-26 08:40 am (UTC)Yeah, but if it's a ploy by Homeland Security to instigate a Bostonian catch-and-release radio tagging program, it's brilliant. Between Fast Lane and Charle Cards, the government gets quite an enormous percentage of the population under location-tracking surveillance, doesn't it?
Mark my words: some nifty new plan -- theft reduction? required licenses? -- for sticking RFID tags on bicycles, some time in the next two years.
no subject
Date: 2007-01-26 10:55 pm (UTC)i don't know whether one driver's opinion necessarily means anything, but i thought i'd relay it anyway.
To: An Art Worker
Date: 2007-01-31 06:17 pm (UTC)