- Harvard just paid $500M to get out of an interest rate swap. I wonder how Caltech's parking structure CEFA bond swaps are doing. #
- Pi Time! #
- Starting to write up the chapter on geographic superposition networks. Should have lots of pretty plots. #
- Lazy lazy lazy lazy lazy lazy Zane, he wants a drink of coffee, so he waits and waits and waits and waits and waits for it to rain. #
- Am I really going to be done in a month? The idea seems almost surreal. #
- I'll probably never really get used to snow. That's okay though. It's more fun for it always to seem like magic. #
- Sometimes de-bugging seems to turn into re-bugging. #
- Sliding forward in time, I'm phase shifted by pi. #
- The lights and the computer and I (~350W total) can keep this basement room plenty warm, just about until it starts snowing outside. #
- somehow I imagine that getting old, mentally, will feel a lot like staying up for too long. #
- I'm going to reward myself for all this hard work by getting the mail and going to the bathroom. Ahh, luxury. #
- 21 hrs up, 2 hrs down, 4 hrs up, 6 hrs down. Six lousy hours? That's all I can muster? Are you kidding?!? #
- Texas emits more CO2 than all of sub-Saharan Africa combined. #
- Apparently in Denmark "going postal" has a slightly different meaning… http://bit.ly/293rNM #
- You're not wrong Walter, you're just an asshole. #
- Running lineament statistics. Making coffee. Wearing a silly hat. Wishing my redheaded niece a happy birthday. #
- Holy crap, I made something that actually looks Gaussian. Best. Distribution. Evar. #
- OMFG, I have conclusive support of NSR from the GSNs. #
- Colorado Bohemian Foundation http://bit.ly/3oLQhr is matching donations to the Central Asia Institute http://bit.ly/2BWwdM up to $500k #
- Being emotionally bound to the outcome of a research problem is much simpler than being attached to people. It's also really lame. #
Monthly Archive for October, 2009
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Continue reading ‘Links for the week of October 22nd, 2009′
- Geological superposition networks (GSNs) appear to support steady-state lineament formation, activity, visibility, quiescence, and erasure. #
- The Sleeper has awoken. #
- New Surgeon General's Warning: sleep deprivation/use of hallucinagens while mapping fuzzy pictures of squiggly lines may degrade accuracy. #
- Is it easier to just be yourself all the time, or is it just a different kind of difficult? #
- Is it just me, or does all innovation happen in the shower, on a bike ride, or while talking to somebody else? #
- We want railroads and fiber, not tulips and exurbs. #
- Eight hours was, as it turns out, a grotesque underestimate. #
- OMG, now we're really in the future. Magnetic monopoles have been found, in spin ice. (don't worry, it barely makes any sense to me either) #
- Again with the thinking in the shower. Maybe I should bathe more often… #
- I cannot stop the thumping trance. I kill-dash-nined iTunes 15 minutes ago, and it's still playing. Guess the lappy just wants to dance! #
- Coding seems downright recreational compared to mapping. #
- not even 10am, and all my errands are done… #
- Had an eye exam. Lens price mysteriously increased by $100. Mail order without insurance is cheaper than Target with it. Lame. #
- Somebody's banging on a djembe upstairs. #
- How am I already getting up at 4pm again? #
- It makes me sad how closed the world's borders are. #
- Definitely missing my ergonomic chair. #
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Continue reading ‘Links for the week of October 15th, 2009′
Hello Mr. Mason,
I just read your article For the Danes, city planning is all about the bike. As a daily bicycle user and advocate in automobile dominated southern California, I couldn’t help but be disturbed by the tone which was set in the first two sentences:
From his second-floor office overlooking a Baltic-fed canal, Andreas Rohl ponders a daily question: How can he make life hell for the car drivers of this Scandinavian capital? Mr. Rohl, you see, is the bicycle program manager for the city government of Copenhagen.
Based on the quotes you took from him throughout the rest of the article I have a hard time believing that this is really how Rohl thinks about his job. It seems like a much more North American perspective on bicycle planning to me. Making these the first words in the article creates an antagonistic lens through which the reader sees all the examples you point out of resources being shifted from cars to bikes, especially if the reader uses a car as their primary means of transportation, as I suspect most of your Canadian (and US) readers do. It would be a very different article if instead you’d said “How can he make life easier for the bicycle riders of this Scandinavian capital?” (I’m really curious, do you primarily drive, or ride a bike to get around?)
When there is a finite resource that has to be shared between cyclists and cars, such as lane width or timing priority on the “Green Wave” streets, a rational transportation planner would ask themselves “How can I allocate this resource between the competing modes to most effectively meet my transportation goals?”. What cities like Copenhagen and Amsterdam and Groningen have decided, I think correctly, is that quite often transportation goals can best be met by
allocating more of these finite resources to bikes than we do in the US and Canada. In an urban environment, per unit transportation utility, bike infrastructure is much cheaper than automotive infrastructure to build and maintain. The vehicles it supports (bikes) are also cheaper, safer, quieter, do not pollute or rely on imported fuels, and contribute to the health of the general population, reducing health care costs. Parking for bikes takes up an order of magnitude less real estate and money, making multi-modal public transit much more feasible. All of these are functional, dispassionate reasons to shift planning priorities toward bikes and away from cars.
The antagonistic framing that your introduction sets up, and which unfortunately also permeates a great deal of bike culture and bike advocacy in the US, does not help anybody make rational, dispassionate transportation decisions. It encourages the reader to pick a side. It turns transportation choices into issues of identity. Am I a driver, or am I a cyclist? Really, we’re all just people trying to get somewhere, and I think the Dutch and the Danes understand that better than anyone, as your final sentence makes clear.
Sincerely,
Zane Selvans
CC: Andreas Rohl (Copenhagen Bicycle Planner), Mikael Colville-Anderson (Copenhagenize), Dale Benson (Caltrans District 7 BAC)
- I wish bike shops would let you schedule same-day service, or had decent loaners (or even rentals) you could use. #
- Losing a day's work to mysterious data corruption shouldn't be this demoralizing, but honestly, I feel like my computer betrayed me. #
- T-minus 31 days and counting. #
- The Democrats are going to rubber-stamp renew the Patriot Act? Who says we have a multi-party govt? Or a free press? http://bit.ly/1wrhS7 #
- Atoms for peace! (nuclei for war) #
- carpel tunneling / haven't clicked this much in years / end the mapping please! #
- I am more than happy to be fielding questions from grad students who are trying to use my code. It makes me feel loved. Well, kinda… #
- I got a ton of stuff done today. Somehow it never seems like enough. Now I should seriously go to sleep. #
- This cannot be over soon enough. Except that, of course, I feel like I need more time. Go figure. #
- "Taxi to the Dark Side" (about US torture/interrogation) was much better than "Standard Operating Procedure". Still dark, but less spun. #
- Woke up at 4:30am. Can't we outsource scientific data entry to India or something? #
- I'm, dreaming of a, white, Columbus Day… #
- I'm inspired by events to remember the exits in back of me… #
- Dang, PCC teaches Spanish, Arabic, Russian *and* Chinese. Next year will be fun. #
- Four different greeting cards for National Coming Out Day: http://bit.ly/3PQjHz #
- Damian Martinez, wherever you are, thank you for coming out at Blacker dinner 16 years ago today. It took courage, and I think it did good. #
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Continue reading ‘Links for the week of October 10th, 2009′
- Not only can I not concentrate, I also can't sleep. #
- How Boulder became bikeable. This is at least half the reason I want to live there: http://bit.ly/XwZV8 (video by Bikes Belong) #
- qGIS 1.3.0 is named after one of Saturn's moons (Mimas), and it's not crashing on my computer. That's good. #
- I'm so tired of hating the world. #
- Getting extraterrestrial GIS working always takes too long. It's like they think the Earth is the center of the universe or something. #
- Tomorrow, I am for to be mapping some tectonics of the ices. Again. For the third time. #
- Carl Sagan: "The sky calls to us. If we do not destroy ourselves, we will one day venture to the stars." Talk about a big 'if'… #
- I really don't look forward to coffee any more. #
- I wish I could make an update about something more personal than the geospatial databases which are giving me a headache., but I can't. #
- Two interplanetary exploration show-stoppers: Pu-238 RTGs http://bit.ly/8s584 and DSN bandwidth http://bit.ly/18t2wh #
- Back to mapping, and the land of the living… right after I get some coffee. #
- Snow returning to Siberia; Europe & the Niger delta twinkling in a thin sliver of moonless night; southern ocean vortices: I see you, Earth. #
- I remind me of an asshole. #
- Okay, I'm getting dizzy from the lineaments now. Maybe that's enough for now. #
- If the Earth had an intelligence agency, I would totally interview with them. #
- I knew there was some reason I kept putting off mapping. These overalls have never felt this loose before. #
- "Accidentally" spiced everyone out at dinner with bean sprouts+chiles+garlic. #
- More than 1000 intersections to classify, at 30 seconds each that's… still 8+ mind-numbing hours. Ugh. #
- Huh, I wonder where all that mapping I did earlier today went. *poof* ERROR, ERROR, ERROR. p.o.s.
#
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Continue reading ‘Links for the week of October 4th, 2009′






