Category Archives: General

More freeways is not the answer

Lots of people complain about the congestion here in Los Angeles. When asked what they’d want done, the answer is almost invariably, “They should make more lanes.” Unfortunately, making more lanes doesn’t solve anything. It’s true that adding capacity to the freeway will increase speeds, but increasing speeds and reducing commute times makes people more willing to travel further distances to their places of work, or convinces people who might otherwise avoid peak rush hour to switch back to a normal commuting time. The system soon reaches equilibrium, which is gridlock during periods of peak demand.

The problem here is that direct costs are kept artificially low; you pay nothing out of pocket to get on the freeway (hence the name). With no direct cost, and all other things being equal, demand always increases to meet the supply.

So what is the answer? Well, there are a few possible answers, some of them better than others, but most likely a combination of them all would address the problem.

  1. Charging direct costs: Charging people by the mile to use the highway, with higher pricing during rush hour, normal pricing during the day, and low or free pricing at night would cause people to make different choices about where they work and live, what time of day they choose to commute, and how they choose to commute. This is more effective than indirect costs such as gasoline or other taxes.
  2. Dedicated transit rights-of-way: Frequent, round-the-clock trains or buses with rights of way that matched/exceeded the commute time of personal automobiles would also change the equation, while promoting a virtuous cycle of relieving congestion for those drivers who still don’t have a practical alternative to driving. Imagine the persons per mile per hour capacity of a bus or train that had its own dedicated lane.
  3. Re-zoning major transportation corridors: Los Angeles is full of two to four story low rise buildings along its major thoroughfares. Doubling the allowable square footage and heights, while promoting the mixing of uses, would add much-needed supply to the real estate market (even now it’s a good idea), giving people more choices in terms of where they work and live.
  4. Increasing indirect costs: Driving behavior actually changed when fuel cost in excess of four dollars a gallon. Keeping prices high would discourage people from taking frivolous trips by car.
  5. Enforcing the idea that driving is a privilege: There are way too many idiot drivers on the road. A good chunk of them need to be given lifetime bus passes.

I can sense the coming storm of comments.

NaBloPoMo 17

Online identities

If you’re on MySpace or Facebook, updating your LinkedIn profile, blogging on WordPress or Blogger, sharing photos on flickr and Picasa, and Twittering your every move, should you give up any notion of selectively controlling information? Or should you just assume that everyone can piece together all the pieces of the puzzle, drop any pretense of anonymity, and treat it all as one big public identity?

NaBloPoMo 11

MySpace launches Profile 2.0

We just launched the new MySpace profile. It’s completely opt-in, but if you’re willing to take a look, you can upgrade by going to Customize Profile from the Profile nav menu.

Features:

  • New profile themes
  • Drag and drop modules
  • Multiple layouts (1 column, 2 columns, mixed columns) and page widths
  • Removable modules
  • Per module privacy (public, friends only, friend category only, me only)
  • Modules settings for showing/hiding fields, configuring display options

This has been at least a year in the making, from concept to design to development, so it’s good to get it out there. But we’re not finished yet. More themes and features are in the pipeline. Enjoy!

NaBloPoMo 10

Vista is a piece of crap

I’ve gotten the double whammy of Vista and Office 2007 at work, and it’s driving me nuts. There’s not too much I can do with the IT policies at work, but I’m trying to figure out my alternatives for the next home machine.

Specifically I’m thinking about getting a new laptop for the wife. Since Vista is now the only option on most machines, I’m considering getting one of those “netbooks” that come with XP. I really like the idea of the netbook; it’s super-light, and heat generation is apparently much reduced with the solid state hard drive. The real question is, can you practically use one of these machines as your only computer, or are most people just using them to get on the Internet and do simple things on the go?

Alternatively, I could go for a MacBook or a Windows laptop and buy a copy of XP for it. Thoughts?

NaBloPoMo 8