Description
In this thesis a community-based ride sharing mobile application, Ride Devil, will be introduced and created to provide services for communities such as Arizona State University and its students, faculty, and other affiliates to find safe rides around campus because campus population problem exists. This causes increased transportation costs, decreased parking space availability, and more transportation issues. The Ride Devil application itself is based off on the ride-sharing concept of transportation as introduced, above. Students, faculty, and other university affiliates will drive their own vehicles and use the Ride Devil services in order to coordinate pick-ups with members of its community. Not only is this form of transportation more cost effective than competing transportation models, taxis, but it also promotes safety, community, and educational assistance.
Details
Title
- Ride Devil: Ride-Sharing for University Campuses
Contributors
- Van Hook, Ryan Leo (Author)
- Lin, Elva (Thesis director)
- Peck, Sidnee (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- Department of Supply Chain Management (Contributor)
- W. P. Carey School of Business (Contributor)
- Department of Management (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2014-05
Subjects
Resource Type
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