Just over a year ago I released the Charlottetown Bus Schedule by Telephone service, a hack that combined the data from the Charlottetown Bus Schedule with some Asterisk magic and a spare voice-over-IP telephone number to make schedule information for the main University Avenue bus line in Charlottetown available over the telephone at (902) 367-3694.
Like the work I’d done earlier with wrapping maps and mobile apps around bus schedule information, I did this as a free public-service project: I want more people to use the bus, and if it’s in my power to give them information to help them do this, I have an obligation to do so, I reasoned.
Five months later I received the delightful surprise of seeing one of the buses that serves the route re-branded as The Talking Bus, making about as obvious and powerful an advertisement for the telephone service as I could imagine.
The telephone information service has been running for a year now. Here’s a summary of the results so far (information that’s always been available, day by day, over here):
- 2,278 calls have been received in total, or 6 a day on average.
- On the busiest days, October 27, 2009 and September 14, 2009, 26 calls were received.
- There was at least one call received on 334 of 371 days the service has been operating.
- Calls have been received from 651 distinct telephone numbers.
- Almost all of the calls were from area code 902 (Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island), with a smattering from Alberta, Ontario and other places.
- Almost 75% of calls came from mobile phones (exchanges 314, 940, 218, 626, and 393).
- The popularity of the stops for which specific schedule information was requested:
- UPEI Student Centre
- Confederation Centre
- Charlottetown Mall
- Atlantic Superstore
- Sea Treat Restaurant
- Wal-Mart/Old Navy
- Royal Bank/Coop
- Atlantic Technology Centre
- Sobeys/Farm Centre
- The most popular time to call was between 4:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. 10% of calls were received during that hour.
The operating cost for the service, which I pay from Reinvented’s pocket, is $3.00/month for the 367-3694 telephone line and $20/month for a share of the digital phone line running into the server room here, for a total of $276/year. Or about 12 cents per call processed.
By contrast to all of this, the telephone service’s older web-based cousin, TheBus.ca, received 15,381 unique visitors during the same 12-month period.
All in all I think it’s been a successful project, and one that’s worth continuing. As always, I welcome suggestions for improvements.
Comments
Do you know of any apps for
Do you know of any apps for blackberry curve for the charlottetown bus? i have one for my ipod touch but i am more likely to have my phone on hand than my ipod.
Susan, if you have data
Susan, if you have data access for your Blackberry, just use its browser to visit http://m.thebus.ca/ for a phone-friendly schedule.
There must have been some
There must have been some sort of Talking Bus aura floating over the city last night as I was just telling my wife about the Talking Bus service that you had done. An excellent service for a corporation, and outstanding public service by Reinvented. Kudos Peter!
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