Beaniedude
Member
We have some buses in Perth that have seats that face each other. So they line the aisle. The problem with these seats is that when the bus breaks or accelerates you go sliding backwards and forwards.
A question for all you guys who can't deal seating in front of another human being, how would you be able to seat in any of these trains?
Why is this something that bothers them enough to go ahead with this? Ridiculous idea.
A question for all you guys who can't deal seating in front of another human being, how would you be able to seat in any of these trains?
Txαi;251962931 said:But what if the person in front of you is... your type?
Txαi;251962931 said:But what if the person in front of you is... your type?
BART, the Bay Areas lightrail, has seats where you face other passengers. Ive been riding it daily for about a year and havent once seen strangers strike up a conversation.
This. Don't need to speak to people on the bus. Annoying and too many crazy people.
There is absolutely no reason for anyone to start conversations in public among strangers. Everyone should just keep to themselves.
I'll talk to you in real life, mate. Come at me.It doesn't take a genius to know that 99% of NeoGAF users hate this idea.
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The new design seats eight people on the back of single decker buses.
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Thoughts on this, Gaf?
These have been a thing forever, no?
That's basically how the backs of all public transportation busses I've been using for the past 20+ years have been...
depends where you live
Well, for what it's worth, I live in the northeast US / New England.
since it's obvious from this thread that public transport ranges per region it would have had more worth if you'd mentioned that in your first post