the wellingtonista

snapped? (wha)

Submitted by Alan on Sat, 2008-08-09 18:00.

the snapper feederIt's been a couple weeks since we last checked in on Snapper.

The Snapper rollout has continued apace, and some of us haven't used our old ten-trips for two whole weeks! (Well, we were excited about this, anyway.)

More and more people are boarding buses armed with the cards; and more and more buses (and their drivers) are ready to take them.

And in the meantime we've learnt many things. (Read on for more.)

  • From the Capital Times, we have confirmation from Charles Monheim (the "departing General Manager" of Snapper) that the chip used in Snapper is unequivocally NOT the same as the compromised MiFare. Good news, but you didn't see it on the Snapper website.
  • From the Go Wellington Bus website, we found a video of the correct way (confirmed by our earlier experience) to tag on and tag off (hint: hold the card steady, don't wave it). We have to wonder why this video also isn't on the Snapper site.
  • From a Snappette on yesterday's bus commute we find that drivers are now instructed to let Snapper-presenting commuters ride for free on non-Snapper enabled buses - welcome news for the many people who have been caught out by this. Again, why isn't this news on the Snapper website?
  • From Zoomin, a useful map of where to go to buy your Snapper card. Dare we say this should be on the Snapper website?
  • From Poneke's website, an email from the head of Go Wellington Bus explaining some of the peculiar commuter user experiences reported by various people. It really does sound like the GPS and tagging on problems reported on various blogs and news sites will be sorted out as everyone, drivers, commuters, and retailers, get used to the new system. Plus, as reported by some, it is possible for two people to ride on the one Snapper! (At least this will be on the Snapper website in time; it's simply not a feature they want to publicise right now.)

We've also been watching what Wellington people have to say about Snapper. And you've been saying a lot. For a flavour, here's a selection:

So it may be a little while before all is sunshine and kittehs in Snapper land. For example, we'd like to get resolution on some of the charging issues we've seen, such as the strange disparity in charging between inward and outward two-zone journeys. But we think things seem definitely to be headed in the right direction.

What do YOU think?

the way you're flogging this makes me think something is fishy...

Alan's picture

Well, this is the major innovation in Public Transport ticketing since bus conductors were dispensed with. And together with The Wellingtonista's general interest in Public Transport issues this makes it fair game for us. Given the large number of comments on our series of Snapper postings here I think that interest is shared by a lot of our readers.

For my part, I'm very interested in the technology and how it's used, to the point where I have a series of postings on the subject on my own blog.

There. I just fitted in some more flogging. :-)

Robyn's picture

Snapper involves technology, public transport, and shiny new things, all of which many of the Wellingtonista are hot for.

What I want to know is - does it automatically give you the best price? I.e. Daytrippers?

Because the line on the website that says : " snapper...will come later for child, senior and monthly passes..." , doesn't give me hope.

Has anyone tested it?

Robyn's picture

Not at the moment. It currently gives you a 25% discount off the adult cash fare for one zone and beyond.

It has the capability for more - much more* - but it looks like they're starting off with the basics, targetting cash-buyers and 10-trip-ticket users first.

* For example, you could have the equivalent of a monthly gold pass on your Snapper, as well as an amount of cash on it. So tagging on a bus would recognise the gold pass, but at a cafe it would debit your cash balance.

Robyn's picture

The Snapper website is seriously out of date! It's written in the future tense, as if Snapper is something that is about to happen, not something that is fully available now.

"catch one soon" (catch one now)
"Snapper goes live from mid July 2008'" (it's August 2008!)
"Snapper will make low value transactions quicker and simpler" (it already has)

And then there's the copyright notice - 2007!

If you didn't know much about Snapper, you could easily think it wasn't fully working at the moment.

One gets the impression that the peps in the Snapper comms department are seriously lacking! This could have been such a positive initiative and yet they've bungled it with poor comms, poor driver training and a myriad of other small but equally annoying problems.

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