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"You will learn who your daddy is, that's for sure, but mostly, Ann, you will just shut the fuck up."
-Henry Rollins |
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America’s Traffic Congestion Problem: Toward a Framework for Nationwide Reform |
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Topic: Politics and Law |
11:56 am EDT, Apr 10, 2008 |
A large and growing burden on the nation’s economy, traffic congestion arises for various reasons, and more than one mechanism is needed to combat it. It is most unlikely, however, that serious inroads to address the problem will be made without fundamental reform in the way consumers are charged for their use of congested highways. Congestion prices are tolls that reflect the economic costs of congestion, including productivity losses from traffic delays, increased accidents, higher emissions, and more. Such prices would help reduce these economic costs, and guide transportation investment resources to their highest and best use—which would include a better balance between highway and transit investment. In addition, such prices would generate revenues to help finance new investment and compensate low-income people and others for whom toll payments are especially burdensome. Requiring federal, state, and local engagement, such reform is a necessary step in the development of an effective, efficient, and sustainable highway system for the twenty-first century.
[ Very interesting article, and probably a vision of the future in this country... I think congestion pricing is one of the only potentially viable ways to get people to recognize something closer to the true cost of driving their cars. Nonetheless, I have a couple of concerns about congestion pricing schemes. The first is the extent to which they expect an existing public transportation infrastructure that can be *improved* upon with the influx of toll revenues, as opposed to the situation in most US cities, which lack even a basic infrastructure. Even Atlanta falls largely into this category. The advent of CP would be fundamentally unable to shift transportation usage to other modes, because those modes don't exist. The years required to build them out, while people pay tolls and see little or no improvement in traffic congestion, may lead to widespread disillusionment with congestion pricing and eventual abandonment of this mechanism. In other words, how do you demonstrate short-term improvements to transportation systems or infrastructure while the longer-term improvements develop? { SIDENOTE : In Atlanta, for example, even if the money were avaialable (it's not) we'd need a long time to build what the city requires, such as the Beltline, a downtown streetcar (or, better, subway) system, a set of secondary MARTA lines, maybe ordinal routes or some diagonals connecting the existing cardinal routes about half way between downtown and the Perimeter, not to mention getting those damn suburbanites to accept lines in Marietta and Gwinett. } An even more serious concern I have is the extent to which congestion pricing acts as an incentive to corporate sprawl. That is, if the cost of travel within an urban cordon is increased, might not businesses choose to re-locate outside of the cordon? This response likely reduces congestion overall, though it must be said : anyone who's been out on Barrett parkway, or any of the major secondary roads in Atlanta's suburbs, will know that traffic is quite atrocious there as well. This strikes me as a non-optimal solution to the problem of congestion, in that it creates an even larger environmental and social cost in the form of expanded suburban and exurban development. In cities like New York, this is difficult due to the geographical constraints and existing social environment. But in Atlanta, and most other cities in the US outside the East Cost corridor, I see the potential for tolls to accelerate the death of urban cores as both residents and employers flee. I'd be curious to find out if these issues have been addressed anywhere, as they weren't covered in the article text. America’s Traffic Congestion Problem: Toward a Framework for Nationwide Reform |
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Topic: Society |
10:41 am EDT, Apr 10, 2008 |
Americans commuting patterns are changing fundamentally. Similar shifts in the way we work can't be far behind.
A beautiful collection of photos. [ Indeed. I love this style... makes everything look like scale models. The article that accompanies is, alas, essentially content free and useless. -k ] The Long Way There |
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Creative Loafing Atlanta | News |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:11 pm EDT, Apr 4, 2008 |
An Atlanta ordinance seemingly targeted to keep young women off strip-club stages also prohibits under-21 musicians from playing gigs at many of the city's music venues. It would, that is, if the measure were uniformly enforced.
That's retarded. The age of majority should be either 18 or 21. Fucking pick one. This graduated notion of adulthood is silly. Creative Loafing Atlanta | News |
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Amsterdam currency exchangers won't take US dollars - Boing Boing |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
10:03 pm EDT, Mar 19, 2008 |
Currency exchange outlets in Amsterdam won't to trade US dollars for euros because the value of the dollar is dropping so quickly they're afraid of losing money, even with the outlandish vigorish the sleazy little joints usually tack on.
We are so fucked. Amsterdam currency exchangers won't take US dollars - Boing Boing |
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ETech Yearbook 2008: Meet the Faces of Innovation |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
11:49 am EST, Mar 8, 2008 |
Pablos Holman is a professional inventor who helped build Hackerbot, a robot that sniffs passwords over WiFi and reveals them to insecure users. He also runs Hackerbot Lab, a warehouse in Seattle filled with tools for wannabe hackers. What he's working on: "Hacker rescue program. Trying to get hackers working on better stuff instead of wasting time in the security-research field."
Hah! ETech Yearbook 2008: Meet the Faces of Innovation |
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a history of evil - data visualization & visual design - information aesthetics |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
8:32 am EST, Mar 3, 2008 |
an animated documentary (mockumentary) about the presence of Evil in Western civilization from Ancient Greece to present day. see also infosthetics' youtube channel for more infographic movies.
a history of evil - data visualization & visual design - information aesthetics |
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Edge 237 : ENGINEERING BIOLOGY : A Talk with Drew Endy |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
11:12 am EST, Feb 20, 2008 |
On what time scale does it become worth considering whether or not we can actually afford to construct every new human genome that's going to come into existence, and we can de-couple the designs of human beings from the natural constraints of direct descent and replication with error? My sense is that technology will support this well in advance of our ability to have any conversation around the consequences of using the technology.
Edge 237 : ENGINEERING BIOLOGY : A Talk with Drew Endy |
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xkcd » Blog Archive » ROBOT9000 and #xkcd-signal: Attacking Noise in Chat |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
9:36 am EST, Feb 20, 2008 |
#xkcd has had about 250 chatters these days. Large communities suck. This problem is hard to solve, but we’ve come up with a fun attack on it — enforced originality (in a very narrow sense). My friend zigdon and I have put together an auto-moderation system in an experimental channel, #xkcd-signal, and it seems to work well, so we invite you all to take part.
Very interesting... forced originality. I'm very curious to see the long term results. xkcd » Blog Archive » ROBOT9000 and #xkcd-signal: Attacking Noise in Chat |
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Music label TVT Records to file for bankruptcy | Entertainment | Industry | Reuters |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
9:47 pm EST, Feb 19, 2008 |
NEW YORK (Billboard) - Former high-flying label TVT Records, home to such hip-hop artists as Lil Jon, Pitbull and Ying Yang Twins, will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this week, the company's founder said Tuesday.null
Dang. Kind of sad, even if they've been producing shite lately. Of note, Trent's reaction. Music label TVT Records to file for bankruptcy | Entertainment | Industry | Reuters |
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