I
have been a laggard with smartphones but last month I finally bought an
Android phone and, within days, I got a tidy return on my small
investment— two extra hours on the upper berth of an overnight train!
How ?
If
you are travelling alone at night, in an AC compartment you have no way
of knowing where you are at any point in time and the need to climb
down every now and then to check the station that you are passing
through is painful. Instead, what I did was to lie on the bunk and
switch on Google Maps on my GPS-enabled Android phone and watched the
blue arrow that showed me (and the train) as it snaked across the
countryside. Only after passing the last station before my destination,
did I finally get down from the bunk feeling rather smug about this new
technology.
This simple technology can be used to track the movement of all trains across the entire country. How ?
Every
Android phone is associated with a specific Gmail ID and using this
Gmail ID one can “check-in” into “places” defined in Google Latitude.
Usually these “places” are hotels, restaurants and other businesses
defined by their respective owners and once someone “checks-in” into a
place, this information is available to “friends” on the Google
network.
We
first create a special Gmail ID to represent a specific train— say
IR12302@gmail.com for the Howrah Delhi Rajdhani — and use this ID to
register an Android phone. Next, we define each of the 219 stations on
the Howrah-Delhi route as a “place” in Google Latitude. For this
specific gmail ID, IR12302@gmail.com, we define these 219 stations as
places where check-in is automatic. Finally, we give this phone to the
guard of the the Howrah Delhi Rajdhani or tether it securely in the
guard’s cabin.
Now
as the train travels across the country, the Android phone will
automatically check into every station that the train is passing through
and anybody who defines this specific Gmail ID as a friend will know
the last station where this train has checked-in and when.
The
immediate benefit is that once the stations are defined as places — and
a place once defined can be used for all trains passing through — and
the Gmail ID for each train is set up, then the train running
information becomes automatically available in the public domain with no
further effort. Not only is the entire process automatic but it is
totally free of cost except for the initial investment on the Android
phones.
This
automatically updated train running information will not only be a boon
for passengers but also for the Indian Railways themselves, as they
would be able to track the position of all trains with a good deal of
precision from anywhere in the country. Moreover, if this facility is
extended to goods trains, then corporate shippers will be able to track
their consignments if they know which train their goods are booked on.
However,
there are few loose end that need to be tied up. First, one can only
track a friend and to be friend, as in any social media, one’s friend
request must be accepted by the target. This means that for each train
id, e.g. IR12302@gmail.com, someone must accept friend requests from
anyone who wants to know where the train is — but this can be automated
as well. Second, Google Maps already identifies railway stations but
does not allows people to “check-in” into them. If this is allowed then
the task of defining all train stations again as business places can be
done away with.
Finally,
and perhaps the most important, is how to handle the return trip. The
down train would have a different train number but since the Gmail ID
with which an Android device is registered cannot be changed easily we
need to have two Android phones per rake and only one, corresponding to
the train number that is actually running, must be active while the
other should be switched off. So a pair of rakes that support an UP and
DOWN train service would need four Android phones, two of which, located
in different rakes, will have the same GMail ID.
The SIMRAN
project of the Indian Railways has a similar goal but it needs its own
dedicated hardware and software. Reportedly, the pilot project needs an
investment of Rs 100 crore plus annual maintenance costs. In contrast,
at Rs 7,500 per phone and four phones per pair of trains, this approach
can use the free Google Maps service to track the top 100 trains in the
country for an investment of Rs 30 lakhs or at 0.3 percent of the cost!
Google
Russia has collaborated with the Russian Railways to create an unique
application that allows anyone to take a virtual ride from Moscow to
Vladivostok on the Trans Siberian Railway. I am sure that if the Indian
Railways were to embark on this project, Google India would be glad to
help in this regard.
Many
years ago, before the era of the ubiquitous cellphone, I had come
across an FMCG company that tried to track the position of its trucks by
giving food coupons to the drivers that could be redeemed at selected dhabas across the country. The idea was that as a driver “checks-in” into a dhaba and uses the free coupon to pay for food, the dhaba owner
would not only get the money from the company but in return would
report the position of the consignment — as evident from a code number
on the coupon that was being redeemed — back to the company.
That
elegant idea was perhaps ahead of its time. But today, with Android
phones and Google Maps, this idea can be easily implemented not only in
the Railways but for any other transporter as well.
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