Philippine Daily Inquirer

Tech vs traffic: Winning app offers help to Metro commuters

- By Miguel R. Camus

IN CYBERSPACE, at least, there is no shortage of “solutions” for commuters dealing with Metro Manila’s daily traffic jams. And the smartphone may be their best chance at finding the easiest way around those bottleneck­s and gridlocks.

This was the idea behind the winning entry in aWorld Bank-supported competitio­n for traffic-related mobile applicatio­ns or “apps,” which was launched in July by the Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority, the Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions, and the Cebu City government.

Trip Barker, a community-based app that helps Metro Manila commuters beat the traffic while allowing them to report incidents like accidents and floods for the benefit of other users, beat nine other finalists Monday night in the first Philippine Transit App Challenge.

The contest, which drew a total of 17 participan­ts, required developers to create apps based on two kinds of publicly available data: The regularly updated geographic location and service informatio­n for all bus, jeepney and rail routes in Metro Manila, as well as live traffic data streams in Manila and Cebu.

The team behind Trip Barker— composed of Mikhail Torres, Karlo Robosa, John Henry Pacay, John Michael Dalisay, John Kenneth Abes and Aldwin Sulit—took the P100,000 grand prize for the winning app.

According to its creators, Trip Barker provides an easy-to-use origin and destinatio­n field that allows it to “recommend” several routes using mass transit systems and public utility vehicles. The app also provides real-time traffic reports and weather updates.

If some areas are flooded or paralyzed by heavy traffic, users can share the informatio­n with the rest of the community. A Trip Barker user can also post points of interest, like his or her favorite restaurant along a certain route, which other users can track.

Trip Barker can be found at http:// appcircus.com/apps/trip-barker-3.

The winning app bested nine other finalists, some of which focused on a specific mass transport system, like in the

case of the Manila Train Guide app (http://appcircus.com/ apps/manila-train-guide-1).

Another finalist, Sakay.ph (http://appcircus.com/apps/ sakay-ph-1), provides text messaging-based directions.

There was also Viaje (http://appcircus.com/apps/ viaje-2), an Android applicatio­n that can calculate the cost of commuting to any destinatio­n in MetroManil­a.

Other groups developed novel concepts like Rklamo (http:// appcircus.com/apps/rklamo-2), which provides a platform for tipping jeepney drivers “for good driving behavior.”

“We want to do this more often,” Transporta­tion Secretary Joseph Abaya said following Monday’s awarding ceremonies. “It doesn’t cost [the government] that much and it really brings out our creative juices while doing the public good.”

The contest was a three-month “hack-at-home” event—a trend in the informatio­n technology (IT) community where software developers create apps using the same datasets provided to them.

For this project, the DOTC opened up a database on bus, train, and jeepney routes in Metro Manila, called the Philippine Transit Informatio­n Service.

The service contains previously unavailabl­e data gathered from agencies such as the MMDA, Light Rail Transit Authority, Metro Rail Transit 3, Philippine National Railways, Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board, and the Cebu City Traffic Operations Management.

“We are happy with the quality of the apps,” said Holly Krambeck of World Bank’s East Asia and Pacific Unit.

“The World Bank has also done the Transit App Challenge in Cairo. The level of participat­ion here is much higher but because their (Egyptian) government did not provide any data. In terms of providing this type of data, for sure this is a first in all of Asia,” she said.

Krambeck noted that more apps drawing on government informatio­n would help the latter improve data collection and management.

“The idea is that the more applicatio­ns there are and the more people use the data on a daily basis, the more likely these government agencies will maintain and support these services,” she said.

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