Commuters: Better service frequency

Transit: Do you want Wi-Fi on all the busses and trains?

Commuters: We want more busses and trains

Transit: You want RGB accent lights at the stations?

Commuters: Just don’t make me wait an hour at that station

Transit: How about colour LCD screens displaying the next stop?

Commuters: Spend that money on more vehicles!

Transit: We could have a McDonald’s right at the platform!

Commuters: Fuck it we’ll just drive.

  • @sexy_peachA
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    71 year ago

    Oh you want cheaper fares?

    You’ll get an another stupid app for you phone instead!! It’ll track you and buy the cheapest available ticket automatically!! (The ticket still is expensive)

    • @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.mlOP
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      31 year ago

      Or, it’ll track you and figure out when you’re desperate for a ride and jack up the prices. Airlines already do this, transit is the next logical step!

      • @aworldtowin@lemmy.ml
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        61 year ago

        Wait what? Companies are allowed to use your data to boost the price for you individually when they know you’re desperate? That is some seriously dystopian shit if you’re not joking. Sets a pretty fucked precedent too.

        • @ABluManOnLemmy@feddit.nl
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          29 months ago

          Airlines are well known to price flights awkwardly in response to the market. They often price connecting flights lower than direct flights, even if that direct flight is part of the connecting itinerary. It is alleged that they use client data (generic such as time of day or specific such as device/location) to reprice their flights, but I think the limitations of the GDS1 prevent this from happening.

          What companies want to do is sell their product at the maximum price each client is willing to pay. This is already done in some ways by intentionally segmenting the market, such as by having multiple cabins on trains and planes, despite them all providing fundamentally the same service (transportation from point A to point B). More data from each client helps them target the cost of their product to each client and maximize their revenue.

          I wouldn’t be surprised if user data is used more in the future to price products, especially as AI is getting more and more capable.

          [1] https://hostagencyreviews.com/blog/what-is-gds

        • @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.mlOP
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          1 year ago

          I mean, you’re not. Chances are they’re “partnering” with a private data company and that’s where your data is going!

        • @sexy_peachA
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          11 year ago

          I am not as trustful as you it seems ^^

          Also I don’t like to have 1 bajillion smartphone apps for each supermarket and bus service that i’d like to use.

            • @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.mlOP
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              1 year ago

              Worst are the apps that don’t work if you don’t grant them every permission.

              Actually no. Don’t work implies that the permission is necessary for the app’s primary function. Granted, there are legitimate cases of that, like a camera app needing camera access or an texting app needing SMS access. But, dear app developers, your transit locator app don’t need location access to work! I can do this nifty little thing where I tell you where the fuck I am by typing in a location!

  • poVoq
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    61 year ago

    Free WiFi access in stations and trains is actually proven to reduce the complaints about train delays. So yes, this is quite on point 😎

    • @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      This is the way I see it. If free Wi-Fi calms you when there’s a delay, you were never going to be bothered that much by it. The only time that would work is if you were probably not doing anything time sensitive. If a train delay made me late for the med school entrance exam or something I actually cannot afford to be late for, I’m probably not being consoled by free Wi-Fi, in fact, I’d see it as an insult because I’d realize they could have spent that money improving the actual system and maybe this delay never would have happened.

      A study can pretty easily conclude this because most people mad at delays aren’t actually being seriously detrimented by delays, they’re just inconvenienced. But the biggest problem with delays is not the inconvenience.