• Foo AKA Fooo (unregistered)

    #2 makes total sense if the delays are in seconds rather than minutes. If it was Japan, I'd easily believe that.

  • (nodebb)

    I'm amused by the wording of the out-of-resources error in the first one. The word used is "Arbeitsspeicher" which could be translated as "work food".

  • (nodebb) in reply to Llarry

    "Speicher" means "memory", the word for food is "Speisen" (or "Speiser" for feed)

  • Wtf Coward (unregistered) in reply to Llarry

    No, sir, it cannot. "Speicher" is German for storage.

  • Wtf Coward (unregistered)

    For public transport it goes like Calvin said 'I find my life lot easier, the lower I keep everyone's expectations.'

  • t (unregistered)

    They just kept the amount of RAM (Arbeitsspeicher) low cause they knew trains shouldn't ram

  • (nodebb)

    We like trains here at Error'd, and you all seem to like trains too. That must be the main reason we get so many submissions about broken information systems.

    More likely the point that train information displays are an essential part of the modern train-travel experience, ever since the first installations of split-flap displays in the 1950s and 1960s, so they are all over the place in railway systems and (more recently) bus and mass-transit (metro, tram, etc.) systems.

    None of that means that we like trains, although when I go to Paris, I'm always amused by the idea of taking a train that's faster than Joe Walsh's Maserati...

Leave a comment on “Something 'bout trains”

Log In or post as a guest

Replying to comment #:

« Return to Article