7 comments

  • xutopia 30 minutes ago

    I once zipped at 300km/hr (186mph) in the countryside while drinking wine. When I was at my destination I stepped out and walked a really short distance to get a meal in a square. Everyone in the destination city had everything they needed at walking distance.

    People in North America don't realize how freeing it is not to have to own a car to do things but without adequate transportation they only see the inconvenience of not having one.

      black_puppydog 5 minutes ago

      Even people in some French cities don't get it. Here in Toulon (southern France, between Nice and Marseille) it's hard to get the point across. Lack of public transit, lackluster bike infrastructure, and decades of car-first policy have left people without a positive vision. For them it's all just about "how do we get more parking into the city?" and "There are too many traffic jams, we need more lanes."

      To an outsider (I lived in Grenoble before) it's so obvious that I joined some mobility associations as soon as I moved here, and I wasn't even politicized about this before, nor was I in any real sense active in the associative milieu.

      Yacoby 2 minutes ago

      It sounds good, then you try and get a TER (regional train) and find there is one or two a day, using old rolling stock, overcrowded for an exorbitant price.

  • dominotw 19 minutes ago

    does anything like this exist for trains in usa. i live next to tracks that has amtrack, metra and friegt trains in chicago.

    Would love to build a cool 'train arriving' system for my son to go up to the window and look at the train thats approaching

      ninju 6 minutes ago

      Amtrak has a 'track your train' portal that shows you where all the trains are

      https://www.amtrak.com/track-your-train.html

      The location updates, esp. in open areas, is a bit delayed probably due to poor cell tower access :-)

      axiomdata316 12 minutes ago

      I recently tried to find something like this for the US but it appears security concerns limit public access to a realtime map like this.

        yason 7 minutes ago

        They should classify it as personal information, and you could share, sell, and publish it as much as you want.