notes.husk.org. scribblings by Paul Mison.

2013-04-03

post/47050918718

photo 22:35:20
Jenny Holzer, ‘Private Property Created Crime’, 1985. Times Square, New York.

Jenny Holzer, ‘Private Property Created Crime’, 1985. Times Square, New York.

2012-11-21

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quote 21:54:40
“ Who still uses pay phones anyway? New York City has announced a new plan to transform public pay phones into giant 311 touchscreens. The new iPad-like screens will provide information, emergency alerts, and local business deals, including coupons that can be downloaded to smartphones. ”

NYC Replaces Pay Phones - The Daily Beast (via slavin)

Islington in London started something similar years ago, with a “technology mile” and iPlus kiosks. They still seem to be there, and I’m not sure if they’ve been spruced up recently, but my main memory of them is that they were terrible to use.

Partly it was the old-style touchscreens, which were unresponsive, and partly it was that I suspect they really didn’t have fast enough connections, but the kiosks themselves ended up being largely ignored, while the wifi wasn’t worth the hassle of connecting to when there was 3G around instead.

I also recall that BT converted a few of their telephone boxes to include keyboards so you could send SMS and emails from them, but I don’t think I ever saw anyone using one (and at £1 a shot, I can see why).

Obviously, technology moves on, and a new attempt with a new generation of hardware (hell, three or four cycles of Moore’s Law have passed) might well prove more usable and useful, but I thought it was worth adding a little historical perspective from another city.

(via slavin)

2012-11-05

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photo 04:20:00
An animated GIF composed from the New York MTA hurricane recovery maps from the first to the fourth of November, most obviously showing the restoration of service in Lower Manhattan and across the East River to Brooklyn. Full size version (1.3MB).
The map format changed on the third to not include the parks or some other details, but I neither have the software nor skill to remove them from the first two PDFs. If you do and want to do better, please go ahead.
Source PDFs: Nov 1, Nov 2, Nov 3, Nov 4 (midday); Nov 4 (evening).

An animated GIF composed from the New York MTA hurricane recovery maps from the first to the fourth of November, most obviously showing the restoration of service in Lower Manhattan and across the East River to Brooklyn. Full size version (1.3MB).

The map format changed on the third to not include the parks or some other details, but I neither have the software nor skill to remove them from the first two PDFs. If you do and want to do better, please go ahead.

Source PDFs: Nov 1, Nov 2, Nov 3, Nov 4 (midday); Nov 4 (evening).

2012-10-31

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photo 23:10:06
NYC Subway after Sandy, 2012-10-31. (via)

NYC Subway after Sandy, 2012-10-31. (via)

2012-05-09

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photo 01:55:44
NYTimes.com: A Digital Manhattan in ‘The Avengers’ (via mappeal):

We also had a team doing something called LIDAR, which is being able to create geometry of the city by scanning it,” Mr. White said. “We take those spheres of photographs and we project them onto the geometry.

Everyone likes LIDAR and 3D flat-textured 3D renderings, right?

NYTimes.comA Digital Manhattan in ‘The Avengers’ (via mappeal):

We also had a team doing something called LIDAR, which is being able to create geometry of the city by scanning it,” Mr. White said. “We take those spheres of photographs and we project them onto the geometry.

Everyone likes LIDAR and 3D flat-textured 3D renderings, right?

2012-05-07

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photo 02:57:08
The Metrocard Project (via nevver, cesart):

The Metrocard Project is an ongoing project that aims to redesign the iconic New York City Metrocard in a fresh way. The project was created by Melanie Chernock, a graphic designer studying at the School of Visual Arts.

The Metrocard Project (via nevver, cesart):

The Metrocard Project is an ongoing project that aims to redesign the iconic New York City Metrocard in a fresh way. The project was created by Melanie Chernock, a graphic designer studying at the School of Visual Arts.

2012-05-03

post/22336063706

photo 21:27:01
seanaes (via bopuc)

Piggyback Space Shuttle Enterprise over NYC. 
In 1983.

That’s probably the year the shuttle prototype came to Stansted. I remember it happening, and regret that, for some reason, when my dad got out of the car to take a photograph of it, I didn’t go with him.
Still, I expect I’ll finally get to see it Enterprise at USS Intrepid some time later this year.
(Photograph: Richard Drew / AP) 

seanaes (via bopuc)

Piggyback Space Shuttle Enterprise over NYC. 

In 1983.

That’s probably the year the shuttle prototype came to Stansted. I remember it happening, and regret that, for some reason, when my dad got out of the car to take a photograph of it, I didn’t go with him.

Still, I expect I’ll finally get to see it Enterprise at USS Intrepid some time later this year.

(Photograph: Richard Drew / AP) 

2012-04-12

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photo 14:46:01
Viewfinder panorama from the Empire State Building, New York (via chriswoebken).

Viewfinder panorama from the Empire State Building, New York (via chriswoebken).

2012-03-29

Avenues and Alleyways

text 03:33:05

A few weeks ago, I posted to Twitter that I’d managed to micro-optimise my commute home by heading through an alleyway between a hotel and conference centre, then through a car park, and finally passing through a department store and shopping mall, direct to the metro station.

It only saves a minute or two (although it’s slightly drier on the rare occasions when it rains), but I enjoy doing it partly as a minor piece of urban hacking. The land is almost all the weird hybrid of public but private, or vice versa. The section through the hotel’s car park feels least welcoming, but the municipal car park requires a walk by the internal ramps, and using a shop that you never buy anything in feels a little odd to me too.

In the wake of mentioning it, I pointed friends at the latest in a series of New Yorker articles written by those who aim

to walk from the Empire State Building, on West Thirty-third Street, to Rockefeller Center, on West Forty-eighth, without ever setting foot on Fifth or Sixth Avenue — to knife through tall buildings in a single bound, or at least in stepwise forays. A writer for this magazine accomplished the feat in 1956, and a photographic attempt appeared on our Web site last year.

I was reminded of all of this because there’s recently been a proposal to turn an area a little way from this - from Fifty-first to Fifty-seventh, between Sixth and Seventh avenue - into an official path.

The New York Observer has more on how this space came to be, and it also explains the tiny POPS logo in the bottom right of the map:

If it seems strange that all these public passageways should line up, that is how it was always meant to be. These spaces are a legacy of the same era that brought us Zuccotti Park. Privately Owned Public Spaces, or POPS, as they are often called, have been much in the news lately, thanks to Occupy Wall Street. The spaces in Midtown are at once similar and different. While none are as big as Zuccotti, they were all built to add precious square footage to the towers to which they are connected.

Sometimes this meant little more than opening up the lobby to the public, while other times developers would build soaring open air arcades. The stretch contains one of the greatest POPS in the city, the UBS Gallery at 1285 Sixth, the southern anchor of 6½th  Avenue, which houses works from the Smithsonian and not only runs north-south but also east-west.

The article goes on to note that the plan isn’t quite signed off yet, with the mid-block crossings the sticking point - also a problem on my walk, since I have to cut across Howard (Mission does have a mid-block crossing between the shops and parking). Still, it’s an interesting counterpoint to London’s declining highwalk system and its still-thriving backstreets, and I’m curious to see how it turns out.

2012-03-27

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photo 14:25:05
“Map of City of New York, Showing the Distribution of the Principal Nationalities by Sanitary Districts” (1895). Each pattern reflects a different ethnicity. (from, via)

“Map of City of New York, Showing the Distribution of the Principal Nationalities by Sanitary Districts” (1895). Each pattern reflects a different ethnicity. (from, via)

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