T. Ramachandran
RailRadar helps passengers know location of 9,700 trains
Train-tracking has become easier than ever before with
all trains, except those running on the Mumbai suburban network, being
covered live by the web-based trainenquiry.com service of the Indian
Railways. It has now taken on a new map-based dimension with the
addition of railradar.trainenquiry.com.
At any point
in time, information can be had online or via SMS about the location and
schedule of the 9,700-odd trains that run a given week. And what is
more fascinating is that the location of any train, except those in the
Konkan railway belt, can now be seen on a map anytime — represented by a
colour-coded arrow that indicates whether a train is running on time or
late.
Though the enquiry service has been working
for some years and providing information on select trains, it has become
comprehensive in its new avatar launched last April. A mobile version
was released in May; and just a few weeks ago came the map-based
RailRadar add-on.
The site had witnessed no less than
a crore visitors in the few months it was launched. And every day, on
an average, more than 3.5 lakh users flocked to the trainenquiry.com and
RailRadar websites, 20 per cent of whom used mobile devices to get
information, said Manish Rathi, co-founder of Railyatri, which is
involved in the operation of the site set up by the Centre For Railway
Information Systems.
The appeal of the
trainenquiry.com service lies in the ease of use. By entering some
details in a search box — a train’s name or number or the names of
stations — the user is presented with a list that can be narrowed down
to a specific option.
By clicking on the train name
displayed, the user can know where it is — whether it has halted at a
station or is approaching one, the timings, the other stations en-route,
the distances, and so on. Also the stations it has passed through and
when, and the distance already traversed. It also tells us whether a
train is running on schedule or is late at a point in time. (For getting
the information via SMS, type SPOT (train number) and send the message
to 139).
With RailRadar, passengers can now spot
trains on a map by clicking on the blue (on time), yellow (delayed) or
red (delayed by more than 15 minutes) arrows that represent individual
trains, and know where it is at the moment. By clicking further, one can
find out when it will arrive at different stations ahead of it and the
time it passed the last few stations en route. In a nutshell, almost
real-time (time lags of a few minutes are part of the system though)
schedules of a train can be had by clicking on a map.
“Response
to RailRadar has been tremendous — not just in India but worldwide. In
the first week of its launch, RailRadar was noted as the top talked
about map-based application across the world. While there are few
additional countries where railways are tracked on a map, reviewers of
this site have acknowledged that this has to be the biggest one just
based on its sheer size and complexity,” Mr. Rathi said.
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