Barbara wrote on Dec 6
th, 2009 at 11:16am:
sorry, jrawle, but I cannot believe the last part of your post. I expect the cost of my ticket to INCLUDE customer service, in the same way I don't expect to have to clean or service the trains before I use them, and if, due to lack of staff as is often the case, one has to phone then the cost should not be at a premium. As I said in a previous post, I have phoned TfL when I haven't been able to find the info I wanted on the internet. Ideally, it would be great to be able to phone individual stations, both TfL & National Rail, as one used to be able to do, to get personalised info (eg is the car park normally full or are there spaces? if so on which days/times?) Finally, my husband and I DON'T have mobiles with internet access & why should we have to spend a fortune on that just to get info (which, as I've already explained isn't necessarily on the web)?!
If the new service only provides an automated travel information service, and doesn't provide the opportunity to speak to a real person, it seems this will no longer handle queries that can't be found on the web, which presumably aren't just routine journey planning or engineering work queries.
I'd be interested to know what model of phone you have and what network you are on not to be able to access at least WAP. As a hater of mobile phones, I only have a very old phone and PAYG that I rarely use to make calls, but even so I could access the TFL WAP site, cheaply via GPRS, if I needed to. (They also offer an SMS service, indicentally.)
I always have to laugh at some people (and I'm not referring to you) who have the latest fancy phones they pay £40/month for, yet when I suggest they look something up online, they claim their phone doesn't have web access. What they may mean is they don't know how to use their internet access, hence my idea of setting up a site to help people make use of this rather than rip-off phonelines with no geographical alternatives.