| web | https://triptix.tech |
| motis | https://github.com/motis-project/motis |
| matrix | @felix.guendling:matrix.org |
| web | https://triptix.tech |
| motis | https://github.com/motis-project/motis |
| matrix | @felix.guendling:matrix.org |
Started implementing support for public transit delays in Maps
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-maps/-/issues/917
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-maps/-/merge_requests/619
#gnomemaps #transitous #mapstodon #PublicTransport #PublicTransit #realtimedata #motis #GtfsRT
@VolkerKrause did a great presentation giving a good overview about @transitous on Grazer Linuxtage 🤩
https://media.ccc.de/v/glt26-679-transitous-free-and-open-public-transport-routing
Maybe we also find a way to generate public transport predictions based on opentrafficmap.org which also was presented in Graz 🎉
https://media.ccc.de/v/glt26-688-c-its-mit-einem-esp32-ampeln-straenbahnen-und-autos-tracken
Following 5 days of #KDE sprint at #TUGraz, #GLT26 is starting today. I'll be speaking about @transitous tomorrow 15:15 in HS i7.
FOSS applications around public transport for the longest time were stuck with using proprietary and reverse engineered APIs from transport operators that could disappear at any point without notice, and which had arbitrary product limitations or regional boundaries. Transitous is a community-run public transport routing service built with Free Software and Open Data to provide an alternative to this. Started in 2024 it meanwhile covers more 300,000 concurrent trips on an average workday in over 60 countries. In this talk we'll look at where Transitous came from, how it's built and what features it offers for use in FOSS applications. We will also cover what data it consumes and how you can contribute by adding new datasets, improving and extending exiting ones, and which aspects of OpenStreetMap (OSM) mapping are particularly relevant for routing.
Experimenting with showing platform information for the public transit itineraries in Maps (when available from datasets).
Maybe these labels spelling out "Departing from…" and so on are a bit "wordy"…
Shoutout to @mapterhorn for those nice terrain tiles. Hill shading looks really nice in the #MOTIS UI!
I hope, we'll have this soon on @transitous 😎
@felixguendling and Robin presenting recent developments in #MOTIS at #FOSSGIS2026 - NeTEX, Siri, #GTFS Fares v2, translations, performance improvements.
Very early PoC implementing the “stoptimes” endpoint in MOTIS in Maps for (eventually) displaying departures/arrivals for public transit stations/stops from Transitous
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-maps/-/merge_requests/612/