sent from a phone
> On 12. May 2017, at 23:25, Tijmen Stam wrote:
>
> On some buses however, the GPS reader is over the driver, while at others,
> it's at the rear end. Something that can make a difference of 25 metres on
> our long double-bendy buses
you should take this into account whe
On 10-05-17 13:15, Andy Mabbett wrote:
On 10 May 2017 at 10:24, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
I believe in British English it should be "waggon".
"Waggon was preferred in British English until a century ago and it
still appears occasionally, but it is fast becoming archaic. In this
century, the
On 12-05-17 23:44, Jo wrote:
I think what I'm trying to say is: there are many more bus routes (and
their variations) than train route relations to be mapped. If we insist
that it has to be:
stop_position
platform
so double tagging, I think I'll abandon and I'll understand that most
people will
I'm sorry about removing the video. This time the sound was recorded, but
everything remained black. I think I'll start using Hangouts on Air from
now on.
If you only want to draw a map of where the buses travel, maybe version 1
of the PT scheme will do. If you want to know how they actually get f