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Sitting on the bus. Can't push the "stop request" button yet, because there still exists a stop closer than the one I want. So now I'm forced to (urgh) pay attention for 5 minutes while the bus crawls through traffic at a snail's pace until it finally passes that bus stop, just so I can push the button
for the next stop.
I sometimes lose my concentration and end up forgetting to request my stop altogether. (It always seems like traffic thins and the bus zooms ahead at 30 mph just as it is passing my stop)
So, a "Not this stop, but the one after" button on the bus would be useful.
Bar Bus
http://www.halfbakery.com/idea/Bar_20Bus Time, driver, please [egbert, Oct 17 2004]
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As a fellow bus-dweller, I sympathize. I think it would get just as confusing for passengers and driver as the current system already is. But when in doubt, pull the cord (or press the button as the case may be) and yell, "No, next one after this, please!" |
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I'm the proponent of the "If you want to get off the bus, tuck-and-roll" system. If you tip the bus driver enough, then he MAY slow down for you ... |
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buy your ticket and get given a hard hat with a programmed loud ringer and a revolving yellow light that does it automatically for you...this would wake you up if you happen to doze off... |
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[k_sra] Not if built correctly. When the NTSBTOA button is pressed, there is no sound, but the request is stored in the bus's "memory". When the driver pulls away from the first stop, the "Stop Requested" sign automatically lights and the bell sounds. |
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Yes, but you wouldn't know if it was malfunctioning until it was too late to be handy... Distrustful persons (such as myself) would be waiting for the doors to close at the "stop-before-the-stop" to see if it was really going to work. |
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The bus driver would kindly look at you like you were an idiot and keep driving. |
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You could install one of these on the "Bar Bus" [linky] to give you time for one last round. |
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How about an "Is This My Stop Yet?" button for when travelling in unfamiliar neighbourhoods? |
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Here here. That would be a calorie saver for me, [eggy]. Especially when travelling abroad. |
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If you're attention span is this short, I'm glad you're taking the bus and not driving. |
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Considering that I always seem to take the bus when it's
inordinately busy, I like this idea. It's often awkward
trying to reach for the pull cord over three people's
heads when you're standing squished between five people
and have an armload of groceries or something. |
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I like my hat the best... |
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You give that hat back to Dipsy right now, young lady, and go play with your scooter. |
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Better yet, the "My Stop" button that you can press when you get on. |
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Damn the feasibility, I like this idea. As a (I cant believe Im going to admit this), bus driver (gasp), its not the sorry next stop calls that drive you crazy, its the ones where you stop, and theres dead silence as 50 people look around with that wasnt me look. You cant leave too fast because it might be someone who is a little slower getting off
but it isnt - over, and over, and over... |
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I'm gonna guess it's the three kids in the back, keeping their heads down and sniggering. |
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[letsbuildafort], i'm also a big fan of the 'tuck and roll' approach, although personally i would just open the emergency exit window, tuck my knees up to my earlobes, and roll out onto the roof of the next car waiting in traffic. |
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How about a route map on a touch screen? As you get on the bus, touch the map where you want to get off. That spot (or the stop nearest) lights up. The light resets and a chime sounds when that stop is next. Of course, you still have to be paying enough attention to know when to get up and actually exit the bus. |
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<rant>
It would help to have a PA system with enough volume (yikes!) and clarity (oh my!) so that passengers have some clue which stop the driver just announced. Of course, Murphy would arrange for the driver to have a thick foreign accent and severe nasal congestion if that were to be the case. </rant> |
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Based on the above annotations, i think there's a simple solution. Press the button a stop early, then retake your seat and when the bus comes to a halt listen for the bus driver's swearing. As soon as the swearing stops and the bus starts moving again, press the button a second time and prepare to disembark. |
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you have a driver announcing stops [BB]? Wow. We have no such thing - and it probably wouldn't be understandable if we did. |
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I no longer ride a bus since I moved
from RI, but we had a simple system
there - get on, show your pass or pay,
and say to the driver "How's it going;
can you drop me at the Dunk in East
G.?" Sorry if that's too low-tech. |
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