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by Piskvorrr 3871 days ago
Oh, sure, there's all sorts of useful telemetry coming from the trains and the tracks, even with fixed-block signalling (unless you have a 100-year-old signalling infrastructure ;)). That's pretty much the case of most modern train systems: the driver is there essentially to (re)boot the train computers, push the "doors close" button, and for emergencies. Apart from that, the trains pretty much drive themselves (except when they don't, oh the joys of software).

However, even when the position of the train is known precisely (no need for fancy CTBC, just start counting wheel revolutions from a known starting point and reset any measuring error at the next known-good point, usually a station - which is the basic way the Parisians do it with their driverless metro lines), not every transport agency exposes this sort of raw data to the general public; usually it's watered down to "it's between Station A and Station B, with X seconds of delay."