Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
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@Larvitz i'd like to add bahn.expert as better alternative to understand what happens to your train and to alternatives - for example the coachtype is mentioned and there are much better/realistic excuses with realtime position available.
Another really cool app is zugfinder. It has a lot statistics to decide which train line to use or avoid.
And the fun project bahn.bet. But wait until you need to waste some time....
@astielau ahahahaha. Bahn.bet is hilarious

I'll look at the other sides. Thanks for mentioning them. Bahn.expert was already mentioned by others, seems to be quite popular.
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@astielau ahahahaha. Bahn.bet is hilarious

I'll look at the other sides. Thanks for mentioning them. Bahn.expert was already mentioned by others, seems to be quite popular.
@Larvitz Oh, there is one more tip:
If you need to reduce your accumulated bonus points: Get rid of the free beverage coupons and go for Gin Tonic.
All beverages are the same points/coupons, and thats most BANG for bugs and less walks to the loo
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Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz @petereisentraut interesting since the NS app also is a little bit opinionated on what trains you have to take. Although it does present a number of alternatives for example if you are traveling from Den Helder to Rotterdam.
One way to foil the app is to plan the separate legs of your trip.
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Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz @clemensg Einmal in technischer Schnellübersetzung:
„Ein Feldhandbuch für drei Jahre Deutsche Bahn“
Mi., 13. Mai 2026 · ca. 10 Minuten Lesezeit · Reisen
#reisen #deutschebahn #consulting #offtopicWenn man oft genug mit deutschen Fernzügen fährt, hört man irgendwann auf, auf Pünktlichkeit zu hoffen, und beginnt stattdessen, sich um ihre Abwesenheit herumzuorganisieren. Nach mehreren Jahren regelmäßiger Kundenreisen denke ich über die Deutsche Bahn inzwischen so wie über jedes große verteilte System, das ich nicht kontrolliere: Es gibt Ausreißer bei den Latenzen, Hotspots, Monitoring, das man abonnieren kann, Retry-Strategien, SLA-Gutschriften und eine gewisse Menge an Volkswissen darüber, welche Wege durch die Topologie tatsächlich schneller sind als die Routing-Schicht behauptet. Der offizielle Planer gibt dir die kürzeste Verbindung. Die Erfahrung zeigt dir die wahrscheinlichste.
Züge… (1/15)
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Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz
"[...] a better mental model."
Survival tips for traveling on Deutsche Bahn.

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@Larvitz @clemensg Einmal in technischer Schnellübersetzung:
„Ein Feldhandbuch für drei Jahre Deutsche Bahn“
Mi., 13. Mai 2026 · ca. 10 Minuten Lesezeit · Reisen
#reisen #deutschebahn #consulting #offtopicWenn man oft genug mit deutschen Fernzügen fährt, hört man irgendwann auf, auf Pünktlichkeit zu hoffen, und beginnt stattdessen, sich um ihre Abwesenheit herumzuorganisieren. Nach mehreren Jahren regelmäßiger Kundenreisen denke ich über die Deutsche Bahn inzwischen so wie über jedes große verteilte System, das ich nicht kontrolliere: Es gibt Ausreißer bei den Latenzen, Hotspots, Monitoring, das man abonnieren kann, Retry-Strategien, SLA-Gutschriften und eine gewisse Menge an Volkswissen darüber, welche Wege durch die Topologie tatsächlich schneller sind als die Routing-Schicht behauptet. Der offizielle Planer gibt dir die kürzeste Verbindung. Die Erfahrung zeigt dir die wahrscheinlichste.
Züge… (1/15)
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Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz there is the app "Wahrscheinlich ankommen" with statistics about connections, similar to bahnvorhersage:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.wahrscheinlich.ankommen -
Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz I would add the recommendation - screenshots of the QR Codes of any card that might be controlled - Apps may stop working because of no network connection and the urgency to re-download something when opening the control view ... in my experience DB Navigator is happy to fail, especially when the ticket is booked with a Bahncard.
Instead of printing I add the calendar entries for the trip to my calendar and attach the PDFs.
but I also have a powerbank for emergencies in my bag.
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@Larvitz I would add the recommendation - screenshots of the QR Codes of any card that might be controlled - Apps may stop working because of no network connection and the urgency to re-download something when opening the control view ... in my experience DB Navigator is happy to fail, especially when the ticket is booked with a Bahncard.
Instead of printing I add the calendar entries for the trip to my calendar and attach the PDFs.
but I also have a powerbank for emergencies in my bag.
@yrrsinn I always have a printout of the ticket and the printout code for the BahnCard in my laptop sleeve. (Plus the obligatory power bank and a charging brick in my backpack)
For the Bahncard, you can download a PDF in the bahn.de customer area that can be used instead of the app.
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@yrrsinn I always have a printout of the ticket and the printout code for the BahnCard in my laptop sleeve. (Plus the obligatory power bank and a charging brick in my backpack)
For the Bahncard, you can download a PDF in the bahn.de customer area that can be used instead of the app.
@Larvitz sure - for me would the dead phone break more processes, e.g. calling or texting updates for an appointment - thus phone must not run out of power.
Not sure if it's already on your list: https://bahn.bingo/, it's also a great starter for smalltalk, when one has not managed to catch a single seat and has to interact with fellow travelers -
Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz @WiseWoman My own DB traveling needs are much simpler (Berlin-Hamburg, mainly), so much of this does not apply to me, but it does sound like sage advice. I always have a printed ticket with me (unless I forget it in the printer), usually some water, and I always book 1st class single seat. The battery of my noise-cancelling headphones usually lasts long enough, though.
And *sometimes* the 1st-class waiter actually comes along and I can have a beer brought to me. I like that.
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Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz eine (schaltbare) Steckdose mit Schuko-Stecker hilft gegen die ausgeleierten Steckdosen im ICE. Damit hat das eigene USB Ladegerät einen festen Sitz. Bonus: bei einem Mehrfachstecker hat auch die Sitznachbatin etwas davon.
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@alison The Xerox C230 Just Works, it's a normal PostScript printer. (Never tried a multifunction, I don't really need scanning at home.) Mine is connected via USB to my FreeBSD desktop but macOS clients on wireless didn't even need configuration. It replaced a 10yo Xerox color laser which I only got rid of because the paper feed started jamming constantly.
@wollman Thanks, I'll have a look.
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@Larvitz Thanks for this useful information, which I will assuredly consult. I'm curious how you print paper tickets.
Do you have a printer at home which works with BSD? If so, what kind is it?
For 3 or 4 years, I had a nice laser printer which I used with Debian and @kde . Unfortunately, when Plasma6 dropped, there was no longer a driver, and after wasting several hours trying to get it to work, I gave up. -
Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz where can I find this "Verbindung im Live-Tracking" screen? As far as I know only bahn.expert's "Letzte Positionsmeldung" shows an actual GPS based position of trains
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Several years of Deutsche Bahn business travel taught me something unexpected: eventually you stop fighting the system and start learning its moods, failure domains, and hidden virtues.
I wrote down the practical folklore that actually helps: apps, routing habits, delay survival, seat choices, fallback lines, and the strange civilisation of the Bordrestaurant at 250 km/h.
“A Field Manual for Three Years on Deutsche Bahn”: https://blog.hofstede.it/a-field-manual-for-three-years-on-deutsche-bahn/
@Larvitz
Are you an LLM or have you perfected writing like one? -
@Larvitz where can I find this "Verbindung im Live-Tracking" screen? As far as I know only bahn.expert's "Letzte Positionsmeldung" shows an actual GPS based position of trains
@networkexception @Larvitz Same question !
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@Larvitz
Are you an LLM or have you perfected writing like one?@andrzej I write my blog posts myself, but use a small local LLM (Ministral 14B from Mistral on my laptop) to enhance the style and grammar when writing in English, which is a foreign language for me. I use AI to give the text an editorial pass before publishing.
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@networkexception @Larvitz Same question !
If you open a trains detail view, then you see it‘s journeys history and see how punctual it was at the previous stops. That’s open more reliable than the LCD screens on the station. Like this here (I use it all the time)

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If you open a trains detail view, then you see it‘s journeys history and see how punctual it was at the previous stops. That’s open more reliable than the LCD screens on the station. Like this here (I use it all the time)

@Larvitz @networkexception Btw, has DB navigator any way of looking up trains by number ?
