Friday, October 31, 2008
Happy Halloween!
Happy Halloween. Have fun and be safe! And don't forget to vote because nothing is scarier than four more years of the status quo.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Sixpoint's new brewery, ESRI ArcGIS 9.3 Seminar, bike parking survey & ROCK THE VOTE
Sixpoint plans on a new brewery facility in Brooklyn. This should give some more brewery visit variety in BKYN (other than Brooklyn Brewery).
Just attended the ESRI ArcGIS 9.3 Seminar to learn about the newest additions to the ArcGIS software suite. Click here to get a quick overview video of some the new tools.
The Gowanus Lounge wants you to take a bike parking survey.
And don't forget to vote at your nearest polling location and check out the election map. No Impact Man is pushing for Obama. So is NYGEOG!
Monday, October 27, 2008
Planners Network NYC with screening of Twilight Becomes Night a film about local business & Free Dr. Pepper b/c of Guns and Roses album
Tuesday, October 28: 6:00 – 10:00 PM @
Tamboril (http://tamborilnyc.com)
527 Myrtle Avenue
Clinton Hill, Brooklyn
G to Clinton/Washington or Classon
$1 PBR all night, 2 for 1 cocktails until 7:30
Film screening @ 7:30
Twilight Becomes Night - a film that follows the stories of five neighborhood stores in New York City and reveals the role that locally-owned businesses play in our individual lives and neighborhoods.
http://twilightbecomesnight.com
Followed by Q&A with director/filmmaker Virginie-Alvine Perrette
Planners Network NYC is the local New York City chapter of Planners Network, which is an international association of professionals, activists, academics, and students who use urban and rural planning as a tool for social, economic, and environmental justice.
Planners Network: http://www.plannersnetwork.org PN-NYC Email listserv -
http://groups.google.com/group/pn-nyc
PN-NYC Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=5875871261
The Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership oversees the economic revitalization of Myrtle Avenue in Fort Greene and Clinton Hill, Brooklyn.
http://www.myrtleavenue.org
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Free Dr. Pepper from Guns and Roses Release.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
6+ million tires, Irish music in Belfast (and in NYC) & Google helps find polling locations
In its now peaceful times the city of Belfast has its pubs filled with live traditional irish music. The NY Times presents this great article and profile of some of the best bars in Belfast. In New York City my favorite place to see live irish music is on Tuesday nights at Dempsey's Pub on 2nd Ave and 4th St.
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Tuesday, October 21, 2008
CMJ starts today, Bat mortality and wind turbines & Quantum GIS web html mapping tool
Reminding me of my GIS-based wind turbine siting GIS Master's research, treehugger has reported on bat mortality and wind turbines.
Ogr2layers could turn out to be a great tool. Supposedly I am updating all my Quantum GIS's (at home and work) to version 11 and then will add this plugin.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Phillies to World Series, NIM on impacts, iPhone location apps & plumber Joe's latest pickups
After hearing the presidential candidates discuss his life in such detail last night, plumber Joe might just consider something brash. Anyway, No Impact Man addresses a point made; if environmentalism is about use less stuff, make less impact, have less effect, might we all be better if we just committed suicide? Might not that be the easier solution?
Or maybe plumber Joe will go crazy trying to find out which iPhone location application fits him best.
With all of his new tax breaks maybe plumber Joe is in the market for Apple's latest line of brick (one solid piece of aluminum that saves materials and lightens the computer) laptops or a Google phone.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Seeing Russia From Alaska & San Fransisco Solar Map
GOP Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin mentioned something about seeing Russia from Alaska. HeyWhatsThat.com shows us that you definitely can't see Russia from Wasilla but there are some few places where Russia is visible.
Also, there's a San Fransisco Solar Map from Vector One.
Friday, October 10, 2008
Homebrewing, Living with Solar Panels, Tour de Bronx & People Make Parks
For example, this dude blogs about living with solar panels at Transition Culture.
And don't forget to sign up for the Tour de (the) Bronx on Sunday October 19, 2008. It's free and its brought to you by the good folks at Transportation Alternatives.
And don't forget this (copied from T.A.'s StreetBeat newsletter):
Image courtesy Partnership for Parks. |
This groundbreaking initiative, created by Hester Street Collaborative and Partnerships for Parks, is designed to expand the role of communities in park design, giving them the tools and resources they need to develop a vision for their local parks and ensure that this vision is considered as the parks are renovated and improved.
It's My Park! Day is a citywide effort to care for and celebrate New York City's parks, coordinated by Partnerships for Parks. You can find an It's My Park! Day location near you here.
Come out and learn how to get involved with your local parks.
People Make Parks Initiative Launch
Saturday, October 25th
11 am–3 pm
Rivington Street (between Chrystie and Forsyth Streets)
Manhattan
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Gowanus Harvest Festival Saturday 10/11/2008
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
NYGeog embedded Election '08 Map & Break the Bottle Water Habit
No Impact Man is urging us to pledge to Break the Bottled Water Habit
Here are some facts:
- Bottled water is up to 1,000 times more expensive than tap water
- Forty percent of bottled water is tap water anyway
- Bottled water is less stringently regulated than the FDA than tap water
- The production and disposable of plastic bottles stresses the habitat we depend upon for our health, happiness and security
- The transportation of water around the world by ship and plane causes unnecessary carbon emissions
- Bottling companies are buying up water rights around the world which means free water may not be available at all in the future.
Here's the pledge:
I pledge to Break the Bottled Water Habit by Thinking Outside the Bottle and using a reusable water bottle instead of buying bottled water. I also pledge to support the efforts of local officials to stop spending public funds on bottled water and prioritize strong public water systems over bottled water profits.
Read the Center for a New American Dream's five tips for kicking the bottled water habit here.
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
New Andrew Bird and Animal Collective in January, OpenLayers 2.7 released & basic computer tips
Here's a nice list of computer tips to send to your parents or maybe you'll pick up one or two. Below is Pasted from my fav's of the NY Time's David Pogue computer tips blog:
Tech Tips for the Basic Computer User
Last week, I wrote an entry on my blog that began like this:
“One of these days, I’m going to write a book called, ‘The Basics.’ It’s going to be a compendium of the essential tech bits that you just assume everyone knows–but you’re wrong.
* You can double-click a word to highlight it in any document, e-mail or Web page.
* You can hide all windows, revealing only what’s on the computer desktop, with one keystroke: hit the Windows key and “D” simultaneously in Windows, or press F11 on Macs (on recent Mac laptops, Command+F3; Command is the key with the cloverleaf logo). That’s great when you want examine or delete something you’ve just downloaded to the desktop, for example. Press the keystroke again to return to what you were doing.
* You can enlarge the text on any Web page. In Windows, press Ctrl and the plus or minus keys (for bigger or smaller fonts); on the Mac, it’s the Command key and plus or minus.
* The number of megapixels does not determine a camera’s picture quality; that’s a marketing myth. The sensor size is far more important. (Use Google to find it. For example, search for “sensor size Nikon D90.”)
* You can tap the Space bar to scroll down on a Web page one screenful. Add the Shift key to scroll back up.
* You can use Google to do math for you. Just type the equation, like 23*7+15/3=, and hit Enter.
* Google is also a units-of-measurement and currency converter. Type “teaspoons in 1.3 gallons,” for example, or “euros in 17 dollars.” Click Search to see the answer.
* You can switch from one open program to the next by pressing Alt+Tab (Windows) or Command-Tab (Mac).
* Just putting something into the Trash or the Recycle Bin doesn’t actually delete it. You then have to *empty* the Trash or Recycle Bin. (Once a year, I hear about somebody whose hard drive is full, despite having practically no files. It’s because over the years, they’ve put 79 gigabytes’ worth of stuff in the Recycle Bin and never emptied it.)
What are your favorite basics-that-you-thought-everyone-knew? Let us know in the comments for this column at nytimes.com/pogue!
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Abandoned town in the Lower Hudson Valley: Doodletown, NY
From NYTimes: IT was early in 1965 when the last remaining residents left Doodletown, an isolated hamlet situated in a valley tucked into a rugged crescent of land that curves to the southeast from Bear Mountain to the Hudson River across from Peekskill. Their departure ended an effort over decades by the Palisades Interstate Park Commission to acquire the hamlet to expand ski slopes at Bear Mountain State Park, 45 miles north of New York City...
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Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Phish is back?!, GPS blamed again for car accident, New music: Apollo Sunshine & NYC's hidden parks
From the NY Times, GPS blamed for another accident. They don't clue in as to whether this was an example of bad street data, a poor GPS signal, or user error.
Pitchfork brings us some upcoming Fall 2009 cd releases. They also review the latest from Boston's (I hate the Red Sox) Apollo Sunshine.Apollo Sunshine have been driving at this sound since the beginning, and this album represents a certain maturation of their ability to construct a record. Don't read mature to mean dry or dull, though-- this is still exuberant music that celebrates its sudden shifts in direction. Shall Noise Upon is a great record, and an impossible one to digest in just one sitting. That's hardly a problem, though, because coming back to it is so rewarding.-Pitchfork
The NY Times also profiles some of the city's greatest hidden parks.