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transport to other towns is generally not a spur of the moment thing. checking a timetable is a lot easier for people in rural villages than using an app. one train every two hours is the norm here, and they stop at villages of a few hundred people.
I live in a rural area - the main reason I often do not use public transport is the fact that it runs way too infrequently - and depending on the holidays of a neighboring state may run even less often. As much as I would love to use public transport, over here where I live, it often just doesn’t fit. A quick trip somewhere would turn into a 4 hour journey.
Also, as I already commented under another comment, as far as I understood, the monocabs will be on stand-by at every station.(they might’ve changed that though, in which case I fully agree with you - an app is stupid)
i used to live in a one-bus-a-day place so i get it. not that there was ever a railway there.
i don’t understand how they could possibly be stand-by; the wheel profile makes it impossible for them to switch tracks so they can only run on fully single-track lines, meaning that any pod waiting at station B would impede all traffic going from A-C.
The monopods would essentially all move - Dunno if that’d work well in practice - never said it would - I just think we should judge the idea to be “techbro bullshit” just yet without having it really seen anywhere close to action.
transport to other towns is generally not a spur of the moment thing. checking a timetable is a lot easier for people in rural villages than using an app. one train every two hours is the norm here, and they stop at villages of a few hundred people.
I live in a rural area - the main reason I often do not use public transport is the fact that it runs way too infrequently - and depending on the holidays of a neighboring state may run even less often. As much as I would love to use public transport, over here where I live, it often just doesn’t fit. A quick trip somewhere would turn into a 4 hour journey.
Also, as I already commented under another comment, as far as I understood, the monocabs will be on stand-by at every station.(they might’ve changed that though, in which case I fully agree with you - an app is stupid)
i used to live in a one-bus-a-day place so i get it. not that there was ever a railway there.
i don’t understand how they could possibly be stand-by; the wheel profile makes it impossible for them to switch tracks so they can only run on fully single-track lines, meaning that any pod waiting at station B would impede all traffic going from A-C.
The monopods would essentially all move - Dunno if that’d work well in practice - never said it would - I just think we should judge the idea to be “techbro bullshit” just yet without having it really seen anywhere close to action.
i mean, before they can show something that will actually work, it may as well not exist.