Peter Nixon
I'm involved in music and multimedia.

 



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  Saturday, 26 June 2004


Band-in-a-Box Pro v12 now available for Mac OS X


I am so ambivalent about this program! I have found BiaB so useful, but so unusual in its interface!
Its Mac versions have been very tardy, and not entirely up to the Windows versions in terms of function as a rule, but perhaps we see a change here. I hope so.

[The Macintosh News Network]
2:56:55 AM    

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Natural decaf


It's amazing what we find when we look hard enough. So many of the things we try to engineer already exist somewhere in nature.

Grow a decaffeinated cuppa. Brazilians discover bushes without the buzz. [Nature Science Update]
[David Harris: Science news]
2:47:41 AM    
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Aussies reject doping 'innuendo'


In the light of the horse growth hormone revelations, some people want to have a say.

[VeloNews: The Journal of Competitive Cycling]
2:40:08 AM    

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Word of the Day


jeremiad

[Dictionary.com Word of the Day]
2:21:26 AM    

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jamie oliver moblog


World renowned chef Jamie Oliver now has a moblog. (subscribed!)

[Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Weblog]
2:14:34 AM    
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Global Study Links Climate to Rates of Childhood Asthma


With Australia having a steady increase in asthma, and very high rates to start with, what does this mean? See my earlier post re children should eat dirt.

[Scientific American]
1:17:54 AM    

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Everything we know about traffic-calming is wrong


Mind-blowing article about the European and Chinese challenges to the received wisdom on traffic planning and calming, arguing that the separation of peds and cars leads to less-safe streets:

"The more you post the evidence of legislative control, such as traffic signs, the less the driver is trying to use his or her own senses," says Hamilton-Baillie, noting he has a habit of walking randomly across roads -- much to his wife's consternation. "So the less you can advertise the presence of the state in terms of authority, the more effective this approach can be." This, of course, is the exact opposite of the "Triple E" traffic-calming approach, which seeks to control the driver through the use of speed bumps, photo radar, crosswalks and other engineering and enforcement mechanisms.

The "self-reading street" has its roots in the Dutch "woonerf" design principles that emerged in the 1970s. Blurring the boundary between street and sidewalk, woonerfs combine innovative paving, landscaping and other urban designs to allow for the integration of multiple functions in a single street, so that pedestrians, cyclists and children playing share the road with slow-moving cars. The pilot projects were so successful in fostering better urban environments that the ideas spread rapidly to Belgium, France, Denmark and Germany. In 1998, the British government adopted a "Home Zones" initiative -- the woonerf equivalent -- as part of its national transportation policy.

"What the early woonerf principles realized," says Hamilton-Baillie, "was that there was a two-way interaction between people and traffic. It was a vicious or, rather, a virtuous circle: The busier the streets are, the safer they become. So once you drive people off the street, they become less safe."

Salon Link (Reg/Ads Req'd)

(via Kottke) [Boing Boing]
12:40:21 AM    

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