More Mobile Transit Sites

I'm a confirmed public transit user. When I can't walk or ride my bike, I take local buses, trains and ferries.  With global warming and ever rising oil prices we should all be trying to limit our driving by making at least some of our trips on public transportation.  Transit, a least when it's working right, is a great way to get around in cities.  But it can be pretty frustrating too.  Like waiting an hour for a bus only to discover it only runs on weekdays and today is Saturday.  Or getting on the wrong train and getting lost.  Or missing the last bus home after a night on the town and having to walk 5 miles.

In many cities, the mobile web can help make transit a relatively efficient and worry free experience.  This is an area of the web on phones that's really starting to take off, mobile trip planners, timetables and real-time arrival information is now available for most major cities in the US and around the world.  Here are five mobile transit sites that I recently discovered.  This brings the total number of transit related mobile web sites in the WapReview Mobile Web Directory to 29.  Please contact me or leave a comment if you know of others.Meenster Results Page

Washington, DC's transit agency, the WMATA, has had a mobile site for years now, it's at wmata.com/mobile and is an old school WML site that requires you to type in station names for some functions and is a bit quirky but offers a lot of information.  There's a point to point trip planner, real-time arrival times for buses and trains and escalator outage information.

If you are looking for something a little more modern AND you have an iPhone (or possibly a phone with a Netfront browser or a Palm with Blazer) you can use Meenster.com.  It's a bit more single purpose than the official site.  There's no trip planner and it doesn't cover bus lines, only the Metro.  What Meenster does do is show you the departure time for the next six trains for any Metro station.  There's also a link to a Google Map centered on the station.  Google detects your device and provides a mobile formatted interactive map that lets you zoom in and out, scroll around, search for nearby businesses and get driving directions. Source: Oatmeal Stout - Justin Thorp's Web 2.0 blog

I tried Meenster on a number of non-iPhone phones and mobile emulators and sadly it doesn't really work on most of them.  However the NetFront 3.2 Simulator does handle Meenster perfectly, so I suspect that phones with NetFront or Palm's Blazer (which is NetFront re-branded) should work.  It's really a shame that more of these iPhone sites aren't  compatible with other mobile browsers. It seems to be related to the use of iPhone specific JavaScript libraries.  There is a real need for a cross platform mobile Ajax library that can adapt to the different JavaScript environments of Opera, NetFront, S60 WebKit and the iPhone and maybe even degrade gracefully to plain xhtml for non-JavaScript mobile devices.NY MTA

Ben from Mobile Web Site Watch left a comment on my Mobile Train Schedule review that included a link to several mobile transit sites


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posted by Dennis Bournique
August 26, 2008 @ 1:49 pm
7 View Comments

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