密市房产经纪 benn ylin
教育培训
永恒装修公司
保险经纪Vince&Mary
广告招租
杨教练
51新楼花专家 美资房企高管 Davik Zhu

加拿大密西沙加华人网™

 找回密码
 注册

Technology makes China's festival travel rush easier

2018-2-21 06:08| 发布者: leedell| 查看: 44| 评论: 0|来自: Xinhua

摘要: Ma was travelling from Beijing to Guangzhou on a high speed train and enjoying freshly-cooked spicy fish head and stewed pork, typical cuisines of his hometown in Hunan Province. "All I did was to ta ...

Ma was travelling from Beijing to Guangzhou on a high speed train and enjoying freshly-cooked spicy fish head and stewed pork, typical cuisines of his hometown in Hunan Province.

"All I did was to take out my phone and make an order, and the meal was served upon the train's arrival [at Changsha station in Hunan]," said Ma."I'm so glad to have a taste of my home on this long and tiring journey."

China is in the midst of its travel rush for Chinese New Year, the most important time of the year for Chinese families to get together.

Around 2.98 billion trips are expected to be made during the 40 days starting Feb. 1 around the festival, including 390 million trips by train, up 8.8 percent on last year.

With their smartphones, Chinese people on trains will no longer have to eat instant noodles, ham, sausages and box meals, as food delivery services have gone aboard high-speed trains.

From July 2017, 27 major railway stations across China launched a pilot on-demand food delivery service for high-speed trains passing through the stations.

Meal upgrades are not the only progress brought by smartphones during the travel rush.

At waiting rooms of Beijing Railway Station, passengers waiting for their trains can be found shaking their smartphones. Within seconds, a service webpage shows up on their screens, with the train schedule, wheelchair leasing, and lost and found services available.

The software imbedded in the social networking app WeChat can also lead passengers to the right waiting room.

"The smartphone service has saved passengers from turning to a station worker for help and improved efficiency for our services," said Ma Jianfu, a publicity manager at Beijing Railway Station.

At Beijing West Railway Station, railway workers have applied for facial recognition for ticket checks.

The gate allows passengers to pass through automatically if their faces are recognized as the same as pictures on their ID cards.

"It needs only three to five seconds for each passenger to enter," said Song Tingting, with the station.

According to the China Railway Corporation, 70 to 80 percent of train tickets are sold online, with nearly 10 million tickets sold at most in a day.

Ma from Beijing Railway Station said that technology has helped improve railway services.

"In an era with explosive information technology and ubiquitous smartphones, railway workers need to keep pace with society and better serve passengers during the travel rush," he said.

最新评论

地产经纪:朱加瑞
明信会计事务所
海外旅游
汽车房屋保险
CIK电讯
加嘉旅游
广告招租
孚美汽车修护
驾车教练:林教练
雪佛兰专卖店
多咨处咨询集团
密西沙加移民公司
广告招租
广告招租

广告合作(Contact Us)|关于我们|小黑屋|手机版|Archiver|加拿大密西沙加华人网

GMT-4, 2024-4-20 01:18

Powered by Discuz! X3.4 Licensed

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

返回顶部