Comment Re:Typical AI issue (Score 1) 138
Let's get real here.
Yes let's.
I live near a light rail line, and that's still a 15-minute walk,
I wouldn't say that's near. I can hustle to my second closest station in 15 minutes, the closet being 8. I live in an area of london with a PTAL (public transport accessibility level) rating of only 2 out of 1 to uh... 6b with 6b having b for best I guess... yeah strange scale. But basically it's rated low for public transport. And there's buses too.
Or I can spend fifteen minutes, ten of which are on the freeway, and drive myself.
So, not in SF, so this doesn't really apply to the discussion...
Rail only makes sense if traffic is so bad that cars are completely infeasible. Otherwise, they're the wrong tool for the job.
You haven't even specified what "the job" even is. And, you do realise a substantial fraction of Americans can't drive, right? And a substantial fraction more really shouldn't be. Unless you like your 85 year old gramps with incipient dementia and cataracts to be driving.
it depends on where I'm going.
Yeah that's the point. With a car, people don't just "set off", even though this is often the claim. Same as a public transport system, whether you just set off or check conditions depending on the journey. I just set off from my office when I want to catch the bus because there are shed loads of them. I set off from home to get the closest train into London because it's frequent enough that it doesn't really matter. I check the journey if I'm heading somewhere unfamiliar or something I know has less frequent service.
So yeah, having to make unexpected changes to your plans is more common than you think.
Well it's not: you've picked a technique that's optimised for a car. Would you insist on a non drinking designated train rider if you go by train to meet a bunch of friends for a drink? No, that's daft! This is why if you use a different mode of transport you do things differently.
Naturally this does depend somewhat. If you live somewhere largely car dependent, then doing anything not in a car will suck royal dick, and its an exercise in frustration. The mere existence of an infrequent, poorly connected train doesn't make it a good option. If you live somewhere largely car dependent, you'll probably have mostly isolated big box stores with poor delivery options.
But that doesn't mean trains suck or are the wrong tool for some unspecified job, it means your city is poorly zoned and with bad connectivity.
On the flip side, for long-distance trains, the interval is usually anywhere from several hours up to a whole day, so if you do have a planned stop for some other reason, it's going to be a long stop, and will usually require a hotel stay.
This is not that trains suck and are the "wrong tool", it's that your trains suck. I've been travelling London to Bristol quite a lot recently. Not sure if that qualifies as "long distance", but it's much better by train since it has a top speed of 125mph which shaves off quite a lot of time, an it can hit that even inside London, somewhat beating the traffic. It's 4 trains per hour (depending on how you count it). If I hated my life and wanted to stop randomly at the city of Dis, or Swindon as it's known locally, to wallow in despair I could do so without too much delay. Though I've heard it said that an hour in this realm is a year in Swindon, so YMMV.
Sadly, that's not most places with trains. Subways, maybe, but surface trains tend to be more like every 15 minutes or more.
15 minutes is within the realm of "won't bother checking" for me. It's a bit irritating missing by a minute, akin to getting stuck in a traffic jam, but the mean wait is ~7 minutes, which is way less than the variance in equivalent car journeys due to traffic. Even going by bike (the lowest time variance mode of travel), traffic lights and general conditions can add on about 7-8 minutes to the journey time (speaking about the same destination as the train). I also don't take the train for very short distances, because there's generally a better way.
The most frequent ones in London has a heavy rail train every 2.4 minutes on one line. As you get further in, trains get very frequent as they un branch.