AJRF 28 minutes ago

> Signalbox's technology identifies the train a device is on by matching a snapshot of smartphone data to a train’s trajectory data. The technology uses advanced algorithms works even with severely degraded data. We are able to pinpoint a smartphone to any type of train without background location tracking or hardware.

Hmm, that's...interesting?

  • ed_elliott_asc 17 minutes ago

    I wonder what app has allow location on all the time and is feeding them their data

    • bcraven 10 minutes ago

      "Acquired by Trainline in 2023, Signalbox works with organisations across the rail ecosystem to improve customer information and operational awareness."

      https://www.signalbox.io/news/southeastern-launches-track-my...

      • AJRF 2 minutes ago

        Few questions, wonder if anyone knows the answers:

        1. So it's Trainline on a persons phone that is tracking this info and using it to enrich this service? I use Trainline and didn't know it was doing that, but I do have location permissions on because I was told that powered the search picker when I started using the app.

        2. What did they use _before_ Trainline? Or was Trainline selling user location data to them?

andredlng 9 minutes ago

I would love to see this for Germany :D

robin_reala 32 minutes ago

This only seems to be standard overground trains. If you add in metro networks like the London tube, or light rail / trams like in Manchester, then you’d get at least hundreds more.

  • jordand 25 minutes ago

    The map includes metros across the Tyne and Wear Metro in NE England, and while its not perfect, it's by far the most useful train live tracking I've ever seen. There's quite a few places in the UK with different rail systems that don't fit together (and have apps of varying quality/usefulness)

HaphazardGuess 16 minutes ago

very cool. Unrelated but anytime im looking at a map be it city roads, rails subway, etc i wish there was a way to filter the layers based on construction date.

I would like to be able to see when each road/section was built. I assume with GoogleEarth and other databases it should be possible to run some kind changelog comparison and do this at scale for at least the last 20 years or so.

inglor_cz 17 minutes ago

I remember my colleague from MFF UK, Robert Babilon, producing his first real-time map of Czech trains in 2004.

The page, called Babitron, still exists and still keeps that delightful 2004 look. I visited it a few days ago. Unfortunately today there is a message "We are moving Babitron to a different server", so the link isn't working.

https://kam.mff.cuni.cz/~babilon/zpmapa2

philipwhiuk 26 minutes ago

Topping out at 10 minutes delay for the most severe marker colour is an interesting choice.

  • xnorswap 18 minutes ago

    It would be better if they were aligned to the delay repay thresholds.