The paradox of public transport

Peterboroughs station on Flickr by rayparnova (CC licence)

Peterborough's station on Flickr by rayparnova (CC licence)

In the current economical and environmental climate, we’re all being encouraged to use public transport, but surely there’s one essential paradox that needs to be solved first:

The more people use it, the worse the experience is.

For example, a packed train to London saw me paying to sit in the rather pretentiously named vestibule between carriages, by the toilet, with my laptop on my knees for the two minutes before the battery died and I ended up reading a warning sign for the rest of the journey.

The return journey saw me in an almost empty carriage, in a comfortable seat, with pretty quick wifi, and two plug sockets for my laptop and mobile.

There has to be some way to do something different and make the experience actually improve if I encourage friends and colleagues to join me on the train. Savings, priority for packed trains, or even something really odd, like having a fridge full of free drinks which are only accessible if two or more people both insert barcoded tickets into a machine.

I don’t have the answer, but at least I recognise the problem of trying to convince me to pay more than the cost of petrol for the same trip, and then penalising passengers if the service becomes more popular. And making travel more social and helping self-forming groups may work.

Where’s the wifi?

Well, I’m back after an interesting weekend. In between the beer and bikes, I had the chance to speak to some of the MCN website users face-to-face over a pint and chat about the experiences they’ve had with the redeveloped site…

As always, as much as I like it when they echo my own thoughts, it’s even better when they point out something I hadn’t considered, or challenge the way I’d be thinking about things…

That’s also what one of my colleagues managed, within five minutes of arriving. After five years of the event at a Butlins resort, I was resigned to getting the key for the internet cafe in the morning, when my colleague expressed her shock at the fact we couldn’t get a wireless, or even wired, connection in our apartment…

I know that wifi is slowly making it around the major cities of the UK, but I wish it would get a move on, and it still surprises me that any hotel etc doesn’t have it readily, and freely available. After all, the only revenue it might affect is that of the Pay-Per-View films late at night, and certainly I’d choose a hotel with free wifi, over one without, or one that charges an exorbitant fee.

It would also make public transport, such as the UK train network more bearable, if only they’d stop trying to eke out more cash for the same thing I can get for one flat rate at home.

Maybe there needs to be more integration between home wired Broadband and wifi access
etc by ISPs that aren’t British Telecom. After all, I wouldn’t pay more for a call on my mobile because I’d left the house, was on a train, or in a hotel…