Ahhhh ๐
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@jon It is an ICE 1. One of the last train of Deutsche Bahn that provides comfortable accomodation for tall people even in 2nd class?
In the new ICEs of Deutsche Bahn (ICE-L and the BR 408 with the new interior) I (193 cm, "Sitzriese") don't even fit comfortably in 1st class accomodation..
May I ask how tall you are?
@Zugschlus I know itโs a ICE 1, thanks. See the alt text ๐
And I donโt dispute those are good. Iโve just taken them too often!
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@jon thats the best type of ICE
@lollar yes. But Iโve taken them too often.
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There goes a ICE to Berlin
But Iโm not taking that. Thatโs boring
I have a little longer to wait for my more interesting option ๐
Trainsplainers: yes I know thatโs a ICE 1. I know those are good and comfortable trains.
But *today* I have my reasons for not taking it. That will become clear shortly ๐
1549 reasons actually.
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@stefanlindbohm @partim @jon Are you able to work using a cached copy of the time table, or can this result in large number of requests to the SNCF API to get the info needed ?
@Sobex Our journey planner runs 100% in our own systems. We have a license for the raw international timetables (MERITS) and complement that with some other data sources for operators who do not participate in the international dataset.
This is how we can plan any journey across Europe, even when we donโt have an integration to sell tickets.
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@Sobex Our journey planner runs 100% in our own systems. We have a license for the raw international timetables (MERITS) and complement that with some other data sources for operators who do not participate in the international dataset.
This is how we can plan any journey across Europe, even when we donโt have an integration to sell tickets.
@stefanlindbohm @partim @jon And then, once you have the plan, you only go to the railways API to get the prices and do the actual booking.
This should result in better look / book ratios with the operators API themselves, right ?
Also, how long in advance are those timetable valid ? Does that allow you to identify connections that aren't open for booking yet, but will be eventually ?
(e.g. looking 4 month in advance when one of the train will only be opened for booking 3 month in advance)
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Trainsplainers: yes I know thatโs a ICE 1. I know those are good and comfortable trains.
But *today* I have my reasons for not taking it. That will become clear shortly ๐
1549 reasons actually.
@jon Provided itโs got nothing to do with US ICE, you should be fine ๐๐ Otherwise, the experience could be arresting! ๐
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Trainsplainers: yes I know thatโs a ICE 1. I know those are good and comfortable trains.
But *today* I have my reasons for not taking it. That will become clear shortly ๐
1549 reasons actually.
@jon the number of changes youโll make? ๐๐
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Trainsplainers: yes I know thatโs a ICE 1. I know those are good and comfortable trains.
But *today* I have my reasons for not taking it. That will become clear shortly ๐
1549 reasons actually.
@jon ICE L. Are you seated in wagons 15-17?
And please note:
11:10: Kein gastronomisches Angebot -
@stefanlindbohm @partim @jon And then, once you have the plan, you only go to the railways API to get the prices and do the actual booking.
This should result in better look / book ratios with the operators API themselves, right ?
Also, how long in advance are those timetable valid ? Does that allow you to identify connections that aren't open for booking yet, but will be eventually ?
(e.g. looking 4 month in advance when one of the train will only be opened for booking 3 month in advance)
@Sobex First question depends on implementation. Many other booking sites run โlooksโ straight and then yes, we (often, nuance possible) save โlooksโ for results the user didnโt click on. There are also pure planning possibilities in some APIโs that donโt count as โlooksโ.
Timetable horizon is hit and miss. Most common is that operators publish the same data that is available in their own sales channel (regardless if bookable or not). But it varies both directions (yes really).
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Trainsplainers: yes I know thatโs a ICE 1. I know those are good and comfortable trains.
But *today* I have my reasons for not taking it. That will become clear shortly ๐
1549 reasons actually.
Step free ๐
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Step free ๐
@jon โFree of vertical stepsโ wasnโt as catchy a name ๐
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@jon ICE L. Are you seated in wagons 15-17?
And please note:
11:10: Kein gastronomisches Angebot@waldi Iโm in 17
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@Sobex First question depends on implementation. Many other booking sites run โlooksโ straight and then yes, we (often, nuance possible) save โlooksโ for results the user didnโt click on. There are also pure planning possibilities in some APIโs that donโt count as โlooksโ.
Timetable horizon is hit and miss. Most common is that operators publish the same data that is available in their own sales channel (regardless if bookable or not). But it varies both directions (yes really).
@stefanlindbohm @partim @jon This winter, we found on DB a French Intercitรฉ that SNCF wouldn't show us (because it was before the booking opening for that train).
(I looked up when that train would be open to book, and we'll book it for Grandma once it opens).
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Step free ๐
Vรญtejte na palubฤ mezimฤstskรฉho expresu ฤeskรฉ drรกhy smฤลujรญcรญho na Berlรญn vรฝchodnรญ nรกdraลพรญ
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@jon โFree of vertical stepsโ wasnโt as catchy a name ๐
one small step for a transport planner,
one giant leap for a passenger -
Vรญtejte na palubฤ mezimฤstskรฉho expresu ฤeskรฉ drรกhy smฤลujรญcรญho na Berlรญn vรฝchodnรญ nรกdraลพรญ
If youโre in the Talgo end carriage - that has a proper bogie - do you get better ride quality than in the rest of it? ๐ค Weโll see
First impression: itโs nicer than a Renfe 106
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Step free ๐
@jon well technically a giant chasm isnโt a step