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Open Payment, A New Approach to Public Transportation Fare Collection
Soon, a ticket to ride won’t require paper coupons, tokens, human vendors, or even Boston’s CharlieCard. Urban transit is abandoning a century old payment system for sophisticated digital payment technology, says George Kocur. Kocur has been toiling for a decade on technology and methods that will enable transit industry operations to become more intelligent and efficient. He notes that many cities have already acquired an assortment of improvements — smartphone apps, and GPS networks to keep transport on time, for instance. But these are often expensive proprietary services and products offered by a hodgepodge of vendors. Kocur makes the argument for developing non-proprietary systems, especially around fare payment, which could be utilized by multiple transit authorities, reducing costs over time. He describes the evolution of a “generic e-collection technology framework,” based on a standardized, ’contactless’ payment card used in many stores. This card, bearing valid credit after an online or phone transaction, can serve riders as a monthly pass, or even a single trip ticket. It’s also very fast. In New York City tests, the e-collection card managed a transaction with a server via fiber optic network in 200-300 milliseconds on subway rides, and 400-800 milliseconds on that city’s buses (wireless data moves a tad slower). In contrast, Boston’s CharlieCard has a built-in chip that calculates the cost of the trip and debits it from the card, consuming valuable seconds. Kocur is also working on a “fare engine” that maps “a set of card taps into a set of journey segments,” and groups these segments into trips, and trips into fares. Complex algorithms come into play, and the end result would permit riders real-time options on both journey-routing and fares. This software is flexible enough to work in London, New York and other cities, optimizing for each system’s travel network. To accommodate riders without bank credit, researchers are coming up with option...
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Date Found: December 13, 2010
Date Produced: December 13, 2010
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