Willybru21
Active Member
Here’s a bit of trivia that you all might not know about:
It’s kinda neat you can see the old stairs and maybe part of the platform when you pass by.Here’s a bit of trivia that you all might not know about:View attachment 501536
Ah! For a long time I thought I had false memory syndrome, because I used to live elsewhere, but had visited Toronto in 1979 and used GO to go the Ex. And I remembered these long concrete steps from the GO station to the entrance to the Ex. But on one of these boards I was told that it wasn't possible, because the old station closed years earlier!Here’s a bit of trivia that you all might not know about:View attachment 501536
Simcoe is no longer a small county - it has over 500K ppl as of the 2021 census.
IMO Collingwood-Barrie passenger rail is justified by the population growth itself:
Lets hope Simcoe LINX improves regardless.
Glad to have helped solve that mystery, maybe you’re even in this photo!Ah! For a long time I thought I had false memory syndrome, because I used to elsewhere, but had visited Toronto in 1979 and used GO to go the Ex. And I remembered these long concrete steps from the GO station to the entrance to the Ex. But on one of these boards I was told that it wasn't possible, because the old station closed years earlier!
I'm glad to finally have confirmation!
I don’t like how the food delivery apps are relying on public transit to fund their model’s viability. And I have to think all these young men from India never thought that the best job they could get was as a food wallah for the rest us. We’re basically exploiting young men from the subcontinent, essentially continuing the British Indian indentured servant model the Empire was built upon.There's a slippery slope here. As much as I like the idea..... no transit system I can think of really aims to carry bikes in that volume.
The bike couriers get a little extra sympathy because it's a lousy low-paying job and clearly they can't afford to live close to their work. It's tempting to think we are addressing the unpleasant realities of Toronto housing problems aside by making this gesture.... but it may be little more than virtue signalling in the bigger picture. I wonder how Manhattan bike couriers for example make this work.
It would probably be cheaper to offer a subsidised courier targeted bikeshare out of Union station, than to impose all the capacity restraints on GO trains as a network. Bikes take up a lot of passenger-carrying space on a train.
The Niagara train is a bit of a mixed message and as a precedent it has its down side. It's great as a one-of, but it's a model that ML can't easily transpose to the business of everyday commuting. Even our model comparator system in the Netherlands charges 10 euros a day for bikes.
- Paul
Given our current public transit infrastructure, outlawing bikes on the train would not be good for encouraging transit trips. For example, a trip I took a couple of weekends ago would have taken much longer had I not been able to bring my bike on the train. The trip I took was; Bike to West Harbour (15 minutes), train to exhibition, bike to destination (10 minutes), return to exhibition later (10 minutes), train to Oakville, bike to next destination (10 minutes), overnight in Oakville, bike to Station (10 minutes), train to West Harbour, bike home (15 minutes).I don’t like how the food delivery apps are relying on public transit to fund their model’s viability. And I have to think all these young men from India never thought that the best job they could get was as a food wallah for the rest us. We’re basically exploiting young men from the subcontinent, essentially continuing the British Indian indentured servant model the Empire was built upon.
I would outlaw all bicycles on GoTrains outside of weekends. When I used to work near Port Credit station I would take bikeshare from Cabbagetown and then drop the bike at Union for the train ride and then walk. It never occurred to me to ride my own bike to Union and try to put it on the train.
Well yes, that's what was intended by allowing a few bikes per car outside of rush hour. I've done that myself on a weekend trip. But it's a different thing where Skip, Door Dash, Uber, Instacart, etc. are using GoTrains as part of their business model. Of course any business downtown that's dependent on its employees to commute from the suburbs could be accused of the same, but a downtown firm will pay a lot of tax at all three levels of government. How much corporate tax or property tax is Uber Eats paying in Ontario?In the meantime, bikes on the train allow people to get from suburban GO stations to useful destinations without needing a car.
The alternative is the couriers drive.
I think that much like personal mobility, small parcel delivery is liable to being automated. Just as we likely will see robotaxis shuttling folks around in place of today's human-operated taxis and Uber/Lyft vehicles, short-distance food and grocery delivery is likely to be automated, if not by aerial drones, then by wheeled robots trundling along sidewalks or bike paths.No, that's not the alternative.
When discussing Uber Eats/Door Dash and the like, the alternative is doing away with them entirely, and actually making people get off their butt and go sit in a restaurant like a social human being instead of sitting on the couch, in front of the TV eating food out of a takeaway container.
Failing that, maybe people could try learning how to cook. LOL
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To be clear, I'm not opposed to all food delivery, and by all means, where we have food delivery, if it can be by bike, great!
But I think restaurant and grocery delivery has become far too ubiquitous; the social consequence from it being under-priced, due to paying extremely poorly; and of people being less social and more lazy is not healthy nor desirable.
Make food delivery services pay their full and fair share of taxes, including payroll taxes like EI/CPP; and have them pay a guaranteed minimum wage, which is also a living wage; and I think the service's scale would collapse by 75% under its own weight, when every delivery costs an extra $10 vs today.
I think that much like personal mobility, small parcel delivery is liable to being automated. Just as we likely will see robotaxis shuttling folks around in place of today's human-operated taxis and Uber/Lyft vehicles, short-distance food and grocery delivery is likely to be automated, if not by aerial drones, then by wheeled robots trundling along sidewalks or bike paths.
Legitimately impressive. I used to be quite skeptical of aerial drones for small parcel delivery but this seems like a very good solution.
'It's truly contactless': In a new world, Nuro's delivery pods gain new virtue
Co-founder and President Dave Ferguson on coronavirus fears, self-driving vehicles and his bid to speed testing of the autonomous R2.www.protocol.com
This is totally off topic, but it blows my mind that in Canada it's normal for delivery drivers to just leave packages outside. It's a recipe for package theft. In the Netherlands if you're not home, they'll try to deliver to your neighbours, and if they're also not home, then they'll deliver the package to a designated spot in your neighbourhood such as a corner shop or post office. You'll get a note in your letterbox telling you where the package got delivered.That, in turn, doesn't work for ordering dinner, there also issues of porch piracy and such, as there are today.