In New York City, mass transit has become a daily nightmare for millions of commuters, riddled with delays, cancellations and derailments during what even New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has called the “summer of hell.”
Transportation app Moovit seeks to be the antidote, mapping the best route no matter your situation.
Moovit boasts a presence in 1,400 cities, and 70 million users worldwide.
I decided to take it for a whirl to see how well it could get me around New York City.
This is where you’ll enter your destination and tell Moovit how you plan to get there.
Even when I was dozing off, the push notification woke me at the right time.
This is useful for when you’re getting off a train and want to figure out which exit to use. We’ve all been turned upside-down trying to figure out which way is uptown and which way is downtown, right?
It works when you have cell coverage, but it’s useless when you don’t have access to data, like in some dated subway stations. Over more than two dozen subway rides, it lost my location several times due to not having full cellular data service on my phone. Moovit’s precise directions, however, often meant I still knew where I was going, even without the visual aid.
By anonymously sharing your location, Moovit is able to passively gather information about how quickly trains and buses are running.
During my tests, Moovit accurately predicted the arrival of every train and bus I took within a two-minute range. And Moovit can easily tell you when to leave, if you would like to arrive at your destination before a certain time.
Beyond telling you when and where to get off, the app also lets users actively report the status of a transit line during a journey. This can help alert other users to delays. But while active reporting has great potential, it currently has limited utility.
When a C train I was riding became delayed, it took one tap in the top corner to open up a report menu. But then I was confronted with six vague options, and needed to write a custom response.
Why not just let a user flag a quick alert, like in the traffic app Waze?
Moovit’s largest drawback is the lack of location names in its database. While typing a station or address worked every time, looking up the name of a store or restaurant only worked twice during my testing. Conversely, Google Maps seems to have every point of interest you can think of.
While it may not yet fully replace Google Maps, Moovit’s precision makes the app essential if you primarily use public transportation to get around major cities.
Source: Tech CNBC
This app will help commuters survive the so-called summer of hell in New York City