First UK On-Train WiFi Service Launches Monday 179
dave writes "UK train company GNER starts trials of the UK's first on-train wireless Internet access service. Currently only available on limited services and in First Class; if the trial is successful the service will be rolled out across the entire fleet in both Standard and First Class."
The real cost... (Score:5, Funny)
I can also see some desparate geek trying to download his e-mail -- while zipping along at 100 kph in his car, parallel to the train.
Re:The real cost... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The real cost... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The real cost... (Score:2)
Re:The real cost...Which A1? (Score:2)
So the "A1" that runs northwards from London is a complete figment of my imagination?! I wish the same could be said for the traffic jams on it!
Back on topic-ish, there's a section of the M1 in the outskirts of London that runs parallel to a major line. The cars and trains seem to travel at about the same speed in that section so I suppose there's a chance of some (very dangerous) bandwidth theft.
Re:The real cost... (Score:2, Funny)
>run at 125mph. The road speed limit is 70mph btw so it's not that likely
Yes, but in reality people travel at closer to 90mph on the motorways, and you'll be lucky if your train travels above 50mph for more than 2 or 3 miles at a time before encountering a broken track, sleeping/drunken driver missing a red light, a delay due to a failed train ahead or industrial action bringing the entire network to a standstill!
Re:The real cost... (Score:3, Informative)
GNER uses Electric 225 trains - 225 kph or 140 mph (Score:2)
Of course, in these days of crashes and litigation, they daren't go faster than about 100mph in practice.
Either way, you wouldn't be able to keep up in a car.
Re:GNER uses Electric 225 trains - 225 kph or 140 (Score:2)
Re:The real cost... (Score:4, Funny)
Nice to see GNER have got their priorities straight - the state of our railway system leaves a lot to be desired and I'm sure the money could be better spent - and that's from a geek with as much wireless tech as anyone else
The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Offtopic)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:5, Informative)
To me, as an american, the trains are fan-fucking-tastic. American mass transportation systems can't come close to the ease and convience that the British get from the train system. Personally, I love it. Get on whatever train you want come back on whatever train you want at any time. It's great.
Now, for me, I want wireless and I want it now
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2, Insightful)
This is what bothers me about our trains:
Potters Bar (2002) [bbc.co.uk]
Hatfield (2000) [bbc.co.uk]
Ladbroke Grove (1999) [bbc.co.uk]
Selby (2001) [bbc.co.uk]
There have been others...
And they are talking about WiFi? Disgusting.
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a bad YEAR when six die on the rails. Even if it has deteriorated somewhat in recent years (and should therefore be given urgent attention), it's in a different league from the risks associated with road travel.
Yet you wait in vain to hear calls for public enquiries into the deadly state of the road transport system. Why is that? I'm not making a political point here, I'm genuinely amazed that these two situations exist: a dangerous transport system alongside one that is very much better with the latter attracting the 'we must make it safer' publicity.
It just doesn't make sense to me.
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to stop before I get into a political rant about fuel tax etc. and lack of investment on rail...
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:4, Insightful)
Also they tend to rely on their size to intimidate. In theory nobody is supposed to pull any sort of maneuver without looking first to make sure it won't force another road user to change speed or direction. But lorry drivers just don't give a damn. You'd better keep your wits about you when you're driving behind one of those things.
Taking long distance freight off the roads and putting it back onto rail where it belongs would be a major vote winner I reckon.
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Insightful)
BBC URIs for the reports:
Hatfield [bbc.co.uk]
Potters Bar [bbc.co.uk]
Ladbroke Grove [bbc.co.uk]
I worked for Railtrack a few years back on a condition survey project, and we found at least one set of points which the contractor had signed
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Interesting)
mikeb made some fair points about cars so I will too.
Once upon a time, cars were death-machines. You crashed, you died. Laws were introduced forcing car manufactures to improve safety. We saw crumple zones, headrests, shatterproof glass, seatbelts, airbags, to name but a few. All these save lives.
You've seen the pictures of the crashes. Travelling along at 100mph in a plastic Tupperware box with little to no brakes, no seatbelts, no airbags, no w
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
at least the WiFi allows people to work while travelling, CD players are just indulgent entertainment ffs.
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
If it comes from the same pot, and if it isn't going to earn money back which will add to either profits or spending on safety, you might be right. But you could say the same about any other facilities for passenger comfort rather than safety. For example, a friend who frequently travels by rail alleges that the air conditioning is very often out of action and you boil or freeze. Are you saying this is right and that they shouldn't fi
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
The difference is that whether or not I get killed in a rail accident is purely a matter of luck, whereas I mostly control whether or not I get killed on the roads: sure, there's some measure of luck there, but by driving at a safe speed at a safe distance and looking ahead for potential problems you eliminate most of the risks. On a ra
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Nice in theory, not in practice. Although you're driving safely about 50% of the rest of the drivers on the road aren't. All it takes is for that prat in the outside lane to spin
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want someone to blame, pick the Conservative government of the time that sold off the railway network to the highest bidder at a massively undervalued price.
So began the culture of profits before safety that dogged Railtrack. Enormous profits earned from buying the network at such a low price and then selling shares should have been sunk back into improving the railways. Of course, as expected, they gave it all away to shareholders a
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
I find it interesting that others won't learn from the mistakes the UK have found from privitizing the rails there.
There are many who are pushing to privitize Amtrak as the solution to the modest subsidies it requires.
Oh, I get it, if it's American companies doing it, then it'd be better.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Hmm, let's see, either 1.5 hours traveling to NYC while relaxing in the cafe car with my laptop, or fighting traffic for 2-3 hours on the boring NJ Turnpike, dealing with midtown traffic, finding parking, and then trying not to fall asleep at the wheel on the return journey.
Amtrak works -- and is profitable --in certain parts of the U.S. The problem is they have to
Amtrak/Caltrans Surfliner (Score:2)
Actually the Surfliner, which runs between Goleta and San
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Wow. You must be incredibly lucky. I've been making a 200ish mile commute for the past 5 years or so once every 2 weeks, and every year it just gets worse. The predicted journey time used to be about 1 hour 30 minutes with no changes, and I never used to be more than 10 minutes late. Now the predicted journey time is 2 hours 30 minutes and I'm rarely less than 30 minutes late, the
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
No, I haven't tried trains in the rest of europe, just in GB.
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
A friend, who was staying here recently and spent a week communiting to a different town was again only held
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
The only ones recently I used where from a village outside Potsdam (Potsdam University's out of town campus) and Berlin Zoo. In both directions the train was late. In one just a couple of minutes but the other was twenty minutes late.
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2, Interesting)
Then come back to England, and try and use them. I mean rely on them, for work, or an important appointment. You just can't do it. My train to/from work (on the line between Paddington and Slough) is late on an almost daily basis. They're filthy, extremely expensive, and very dangerous. There is no system to prevent trains crossing red signals - you have to hope the human driver is in a
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
You don't see a problem with UK trains because you're american. Try european trains: the extent of the networks, the cleanness of the carriages and the consistency of investment are usually much better than in the UK. I'm talking germany, switzerland, even france (think of the new 2-floor TGVs...very comfy, very smooth.) Here in france trains usually leave and arrive within the minute
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Interesting)
Arround here (Birmingham) ~40% of the trains have delays bigger than 5 minutes. In the weekend it can be hours, HOURS. During the summer the line from Birmingham to London was cut for maintainence for 3 DAYS IN A ROW. Buses were at least available as an alternative.
And most of the trains are not confortable. Especially the local one
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
I'd second that. I've used them for about 5 years now, and I commuted regularly on them (12 journeys a week) for about 3 months, and I really don't have a big problem with them. Even when I've had a major problem (like a train from York being diverted and so missing the last train from Birmingham), they've put on coach services to take us there. Doesn't that smack of good service in ba
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Yes, God forbid that we should want the service that we've paid for, especially after the railway raised the fare into London from here by 50% last year. We should be grateful that we get the crap service that we do, and apologise when someone complains about having to stand for an hour on the platform in the wind and rain because the previou
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
We'd all be a lot better off, and all that money wasted running trains could be spent on building proper roads instead. But that will never happen while the transport unions are a significant force in politics.
Hmmm, you haven't thought this through, have you? To match the capacity of a fully operational rail network we'd have to expand roads so dramatically that we'd completely decimate huge areas of natural beauty, cultural and biological significance. We'd have to compl
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Insightful)
The American system is total crap, but that doesn't mean the UK system is great. I've never used the UK system, but your description doesn't sound so good. In France, if a train is more than a couple of minutes late, they actually get on the PA and say "we're sorry for the delay, please don't hate us". Ten minutes late is nutty. I've only been mor
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:3, Funny)
Which is fine if you have nothing better to do with your time. Some of us actually travel in order to get somewhere, and not to "enjoy" sitting on a train full of drunken football hooligans, beggars and people coughing and sneezing all over us.
I live on a direct rail line in and out of London, yet if I want to go to Lon
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Short memories! The reason the railways are in such a sorry state really was the attempt by the Wilson Government to make them comercial in the 1960s. Over half the line was ripped up (2,500 miles!) and over two thirds of the stations closed. One of the biggest losses was the removal of the 'slow lines' which means there's no alternate tracks for slow moving goods or as back up lines. How many times has a train been delayed be
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
Good point. I took a ride on the Midland Mainline up to Kettering last month and couldn't believe how much that thing shook from side-to-side. Not near as nice running as the older diesel-electrics I rode in in past visits to the UK (ok, so you had to open the window to reach out to open the door at a station, but the trains themselves were much smoother running...)
And 25 quid for an hour journey is a bit on the steep side too. Then
Re:The problem I have with trains (Score:2)
I still have to lean out of the window to open the door. I kid you not.
Impressive (Score:1)
Just a shame that GNER don't actually operate this far West in the UK.
Not having a laptop is probably going to be an issue as well, I suppose.
VIA Already has this (Score:5, Informative)
I've seen one go by while I was at the train station on day waiting for the commuter train but it was going by a bit too quickly for me to try to grab a connection with my axim x3i :P
Cool! (Score:4, Interesting)
Its unfortunate that this is currently only available in one carriage, one would imagine that the expensive bit is the satellite uplink (assuming this is how they do it, although I saw GSM mentioned somewhere), distributing the wireless within the train should be the easy bit.
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
The only time it really makes sense to drive is when the customers site is to far from the station.
window dressing (Score:2, Interesting)
on a standard rate ticket the train cars are massively over packed during commuter periods. thankfully the gner routes are not as popular as the ones in the south and south-east.
that this has happened at all is a nice and due to competition from virgin trains who operate on the western main line up and down the country, who offer laptop and mobile charging, etc. on your journey for a business class
Re:window dressing (Score:2)
Re:window dressing (Score:2)
Re:window dressing (Score:2)
Re:window dressing (Score:2)
What, is it 1995 again?!? Did AOL just buy ANS? Hey, maybe my stock options are worth something again!!
Re:window dressing (Score:2)
Incredibly, some of the recommendations from Clapham Junction have still not been implemented because the railway companies have been stuffed by Railtrack; the removal of all slamdoor trains from the network, for example, or Automatic Train Protection.
GNER are, however, the best railway company I've travelled with; for a start, the price of beverages on their trains actually went down after
Re:window dressing (Score:3, Insightful)
amtrak testing it (Score:4, Informative)
Looking now, I see that the local train [amtrakcapitols.com] is testing wifi [amtrakcapitols.com] on certain routes.
Thank you... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Thank you... (Score:2)
Residents near the train tracks get free WiFi too! (Score:4, Funny)
Amazing bandwidth multiplication. (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd be interested to know how the expect to get DSL-level bandwith from GSM technology, especially when more than one person will be using the line.
Also, in my experience public WIFI providers tend to charge an arm and a leg for the service. I'm sure the trial is free, but I can't see it remaining that way when the role the service out to "standard class". 1 per email, anyone ?
Re:Amazing bandwidth multiplication. (Score:2)
The latter would be simpler, because I think you'd need a license to upload to a satellite. Does anyone know how this is done with satellite phones e.g.?
I'll believe it when I see it (Score:2, Insightful)
Also the UK train system does not have a particularly good record for efficiency, they really struggle with the retailing computers in the snack-bar so why do I not have a good feeli
Re:I'll believe it when I see it (Score:2)
I've seen people reading books and newspapers in the car WHILE driving - not just while stopped and with portable DVD players becoming more and more prevalent they're starting to take away from the brain time of the modern driver.
As an earlier poster mentioned there are 6 people killed on roads in the UK each day yet there are
Re:I'll believe it when I see it (Score:2)
France is doing it too (Score:5, Informative)
More technical details (Score:5, Informative)
Not detected (yet) (Score:2)
Re:Not detected (yet) (Score:2, Informative)
*sigh* (Score:2)
not to mention bathrooms working maybe in 20% cases.
Will we notice the difference? (Score:5, Funny)
"The nine-*crackle* packets from *garble* will now be arriving at platform *mumble*."
Give people more info (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Give people more info (Score:3, Informative)
I agree - whenever I catch sight of a TDS screen, the information is far more useful to me than the CIS (Customer mis-Information System) that powers the platform screens and indicators -assuming they haven crashed (most of the time) or aren't displaying an MS Windows error dialogue!
They should deinately have a web front end to the TDS maps.
Rail safety ... (Score:4, Funny)
Never mind the connection speed varying - we're all gonna die !
WiFi LAN Game Protocol? (Score:4, Interesting)
I see only two problems. The first is security. Depending on who programs the protocol, it could end up with exploits. Also, the games might provide a channel for exploits if someone uses a hacked copy of Doom to insinuate themselves into another rider's laptop. The second problem would be playability when the person in car 3 decides to use the 5 hour journey to download the latest Linux distro.
Speed and happiness (Score:4, Interesting)
People will complain about late or cancelled trains but the fact is that no journey is every fast enough if you're not enjoying yourself, and no journey is too slow if you're having a good time.
The question therefore is: will on-board internet links make life better or worse for travellers? And the answer is obviously "yes".
With a notebook and wifi, even long waits are entirely bearable and can be fun. I'd rather a four-hour train journey with wifi than a two hour flight without.
Re:Speed and happiness (Score:2, Funny)
Hmmm...
I think 'better' or 'worse' would have been more obvious answers
Re:Speed and happiness (Score:2)
Better, better, it was "better" (Score:2)
Back to the story, I think trains, planes, airports and terminals are about the only places where WiFi has a real future, where there is a captive market with notebooks and money to spend on keeping up to date with their latest Slashdot karma.
Re:Speed and happiness (Score:2)
Wardriver fatalities Increase (Score:2)
I can see now swathes of Wardrivers being killed at the wheel while driving in excess of 110mph trying to maintain the "perfect signal" they just aquired.
Oh the dark times ahead....
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:5, Insightful)
I will guarantee you if you put ethernet ports out, within hours they will be plugged with chewing gum. Its just the way people are. Most of us are pure pigs. Talk to any custodian of a public place if you don't believe me.
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:2)
i think the wireless route is a poor one to follow anyways. how many years will it be before theres more people wanting to use the internet access than wifi can handle? cat5, however, is still going
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:2)
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:3, Funny)
Not as stupid as packing 200 passengers into a small train carriage that has CAT5 cabling trailing everywhere!
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:2)
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:2)
Re:what a stupid idea (Score:2)