الجمعة، 30 أكتوبر 2020

New Twin Peaks Proposals: Survey Open Until November 3

New Twin Peaks Proposals: Survey Open Until November 3
By

Map with a blue line indicating both the north and south gates open at all time for vehicles as were conditions pre-pandemic. A green line indicates the east side of the figure eight is reserved for pedestrians and biking. The west side of the figure eight is reserved for two-way traffic.

The Twin Peaks Boulevard gates were closed early in the pandemic to reduce crowding at Christmas Tree Point lookout parking lot. Since then, Twin Peaks Park use has increased significantly among people walking, rolling, hiking, jogging and bicycling, with an average of over 800 visiting each weekday and over 1,100 on weekend days.

While the new park configuration received support, it also resulted in community concerns regarding accessibility for people with disabilities and negative neighborhood impacts. In an attempt to address concerns, local roadway access is now available via the Portola Drive south gate daily between 6:00 p.m. and midnight. 

The SFMTA is working with the community and other city departments including Recreation and Parks, the Police Department and Public Works, on new ideas to ensure access that balances the needs on Twin Peaks.

Project Goals:

  • Restoring access to the viewpoint, especially for people with disabilities 
  • Providing a space for people walking and rolling that allows for physical distancing 
  • Reducing negative impacts by park users on neighbors 
  • Retaining the extraordinary increase in new park users by maintaining safe, continuous routes for those traveling on foot, bicycle and assistive mobility devices

SFMTA is seeking feedback on five alternative designs for Twin Peaks. Please explore the designs and provide input below with our survey. The survey will close November 3. Community feedback will be analyzed and final proposals shared with the community. 

Twin Peaks Survey

Twin Peaks Survey (Chinese)

Twin Peaks Survey (Spanish)

Twin Peaks Survey (Tagalog)

For more information on Twin Peaks please visit our Twin Peaks For All project page.



Published October 30, 2020 at 05:48PM
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الأربعاء، 28 أكتوبر 2020

Moving Better Market Street Forward

Moving Better Market Street Forward
By

This blog is co-authored by SFMTA Director of Transportation Jeffrey Tumlin and San Francisco Public Works Acting Director Alaric Degrafinried.

Less than a year after car-free Market Street closed the area to private vehicles to improve safety and transit performance and set the stage for construction of Better Market Street, city agencies involved in the project must adjust plans for the first phase of project construction from 5th to 8th streets.

Our plans for the project need to change not only because of the impact on the local economy and our department budgets due to COVID-19, but also because of the greater-than-anticipated success of car-free Market Street. When private vehicles were removed from Market Street, transit became up to 12% faster and the number of people biking increased by 25% – over 800 people per hour at peak. The original designs for a new sidewalk-level bikeway would not have enough capacity to keep up with the updated demand of people biking on Market Street.

The COVID-19 pandemic also required us to revise our plans because it is not only a health crisis but is also devastating the economy, including local businesses and the capital funds of all city agencies involved in this project. As local businesses work to recover, we need to minimize construction disruptions – especially on the sidewalks in front of their stores.

Given the economic challenges and changing demands we now face in San Francisco, our departments came together and made the tough decision to adjust the design for Better Market Street in order to move the project forward. As a city, we remain committed to working with our community partners and delivering the Better Market Street project to make this vital corridor safer, more resilient and more inviting for all.

 

Funding and Time Constraints

The full project from Octavia Boulevard to Steuart Street was estimated to cost over $600M when the project was approved. By the time the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the city had secured only approximately $200M to plan, design and construct the full project. The funding gap was going to be a challenge even before the current financial crisis decimated our department budgets. By postponing major changes to the sidewalks and limiting certain infrastructure upgrades, we expect to save over$60M for Phase 1 between 5th and 8th streets alone.

Construction must start in early 2021 due to the requirements of a federal BUILD Grant providing key funding for building the project. These grant funds are needed now more than ever so we must proceed as quickly and thoughtfully as possible to get started.

 

Goals and Plan for Phase 1 Construction: 5th to 8th Streets

The project goals remain to improve safety, transportation, accessibility, infrastructure and revitalize Market as the city’s preeminent civic space and ceremonial street. The first phase of construction between 5th and 8th streets is focused on four key components:

  • Create a bike facility that will safely accommodate more people on bicycles
  • Build new accessible boarding islands to improve the customer experience, transit functionality and capacity, and new wider curb ramps to upgrade sidewalk accessibility
  • Upgrade and replace aging infrastructure like the rails, overhead lines, traffic signals, sewer and water lines, and repave the street
  • Replace unhealthy trees and new street furnishings but postpone replacing the brick sidewalks or changing the sidewalk to minimize disruptions directly in front of local businesses

 

Changes for People Biking

The original sidewalk-level bikeway design is too expensive and won’t have enough capacity. It was designed to accommodate 2015 levels of people biking – half the people biking in 2020 pre-COVID, let alone the increases we expect to see in the future. As in our original plans, we remain committed to reducing conflicts between Muni and people on bikes.

Our new plan is to move all Muni buses to the center lane, reserving the curb lane for bikes to share with paratransit, taxis and commercial vehicles (note: Uber/Lyft are considered private vehicles and are not allowed on Market Street). By removing curbside transit stops we will also eliminate conflicts between buses and people on bikes.

The curb lane will have updated bike priority markings on the pavement, speed tables to discourage speeding and a raised buffer between lanes to discourage vehicles from changing lanes. Loading restrictions in the morning and evening peak commute hours continue to limit delivery vehicles and conflicts during the busiest times on Market Street.

Better Market Street bike lane graphic

Graphic: The first phase of Better Market Street includes a bike-priority curb lane and center Muni-only lane. San Francisco Public Works

 

Accessibility and Transit

All Muni routes on Market Street between 5th and 8th streets will shift to the center in a Muni-only lane – taxis and other buses are not allowed. To reduce crowding for customers waiting, we plan to build new boarding islands that are twice as big as the current islands. The new islands at UN Plaza and at 6th Street will have new shelters with seating, be fully accessible, and include wheelchair ramps for F-line service.

New wider sidewalk curb ramps at intersections and across from boarding islands will also make the sidewalk more accessible.

Better Market Street new Civic Center area graphic

Graphic: Accessible center boarding island at UN Plaza. San Francisco Public Works  

 

State of Good Repair

Better Market Street will replace the worn-down rails, BART grates in the street, and traffic signals, and fully repave the road. The project team plans to replace some water and sewer pipes that have reached end of life and reline others to extend their life. Lastly, some transit infrastructure is worn out and in need of replacing, including the traction power systems that provide electricity to vehicles, overhead lines and switches.

Plans for Better Market Street also still include construction of the F-Loop, which will improve Muni service with new rail along McAllister Street and Charles J. Brenham Place allowing the F Market & Wharves streetcars to return to the waterfront for faster service without limiting access to the Castro.

 

Postponing Major Sidewalk Work

By not widening the sidewalk, replacing light and overhead cable system poles and other utilities, or the red brick, we can significantly reduce immediate costs as well as disruptions to businesses along the street. We plan to revisit this segment between 5th and 8th streets further down the line when conditions improve and work with building developers to make sidewalk upgrades part of their work.

 

Public Meetings

We recognize that these are big changes. We are actively meeting with project stakeholders and city partners. We will hold a virtual open house from November 2 – 13 that will be available online for the public to visit. We will also hold virtual public meetings on November 4th at noon and November 9th at 4:30pm to share project details and hear feedback. For details please visit the Better Market Street project website.



Published October 28, 2020 at 11:59PM
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الاثنين، 26 أكتوبر 2020

City Project to Improve the 28 19th Avenue Bus Line

City Project to Improve the 28 19th Avenue Bus Line
By Enrique Aguilar

As part of the 19th Avenue Combined City Project, the SFMTA will implement transit priority and safety improvements for people walking along the route of the 28 19th Avenue. The improvements will make it safer to walk, remove stops to make transit service more reliable, and enhance customers’ experiences—on and off the bus.  

As part of the project, seven Muni stops were removed between Irving Street and Ocean Avenue on the 28 19th Avenue bus line to improve transit reliability. Removing closely spaced stops will help to reduce delays for the 28 19th Avenue line while preserving bus stops within a block of each removal to minimize impacts to people with limited mobility. Please visit our website for more details about these stop changes, which took effect on October 17.  

The project includes transit bulbs that allow Muni vehicles to stop for passengers without having to pull out of traffic. It will also widen the sidewalk at corners by installing pedestrian bulbs along 19th Avenue and modify traffic and pedestrian signals to give people who walk more time to cross the street.  

The SFMTA Board approved the project, including these stop changes, after community engagement and feedback in 2015.  

Diagram summarizes proposed improvements, which include transit bulbs at 13 intersections, pedestrian bulbs at 19 intersections, stop relocation at eight intersections including udah, Lawton, Noriega, Rivera, Taraval, Vincente, Eucalyptus, Winston. It will make bus stops far-sided to take advantage of Transit Signal Priority, local stop only at two intersections, and bus zone extension at one intersection.

Diagram of 28th the 19th Avenue Rapid Project improvements (note: stop removal on 19th at Irving is still under review) 

The transit improvements are just one part of the combined project that will also include water main and sewer replacement and rehabilitation and Auxiliary Water Supply Service for emergency fire fighting. This project will be followed by Caltrans repaving of 19th Avenue from Holloway Avenue to Lincoln Way. 

San Francisco Public Works will lead construction, beginning in Fall 2020 and be completed in 2023. Project work will be completed in four segments to minimize construction impacts during its 27-month duration. The first construction segment from Lincoln Way to Noriega Street on 19th Avenue is anticipated to begin in November.  

In preparation for stop changes this month, project staff has mailed over 10,000 postcards to residents near the project area, posted multilingual signs at every intersection, and briefed district supervisors for District Three, Four and Seven. Transit Information Program (TIP) staff along 19th Avenue were present during the first six days of these stop changes taking effect to help customers find alternative stops, provide project information and answer questions.  

TIP staff helping 28 19th Avenue customers find alternative stops 

TIP staff helping 28 19th Avenue customers find alternative stops 

Find additional information about the transit reliability and pedestrian safety components of the project at SFMTA.com/28Rapid. For the overall project information, please visit sfpublicworks.org/19th-Avenue.



Published October 26, 2020 at 10:47PM
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الخميس، 22 أكتوبر 2020

Shared Spaces Permits Extending to Next Summer

Shared Spaces Permits Extending to Next Summer
By Phillip Pierce

More than 1,800 individual operators and counting are making the Shared Spaces Program a successful part of San Francisco’s economic recovery. Permits originally set to expire at the end of December may now be extended through June 30 and new applications are welcome. Mayor Breed has called for this extension as well as for exploring ways to make the program permanent.

Shared Spaces allow merchants to use sidewalks, full or partial streets, and other nearby outdoor spaces like parks, parking lots and plazas for restaurant pick-up and other neighborhood retail activities allowed under San Francisco’s Public Health Orders. The program is a multiagency collaboration born out of the city’s Economic Recovery Task Force. 

The White Cap shared space with people eating in the Outer Sunset.

White Cap’s Shared Space in the Outer Sunset.

How to Renew Existing Permits:

The process for renewing permits to June 30, 2021  depends on the type of Shared Space. Merchants may use the following guide to understand how to renew a permit:

  • Sidewalk Permits – Automatically renewed before December 31, 2020.  No action is needed from the permittee unless:
    • The permittee wants to modify the existing permit. To do so, the permittee must submit a new application for a Sidewalk Permit on the Shared Spaces website.  
    • The permittee wants to discontinue or withdraw the existing permit. To do so, email SharedSpacesPermit@sfdpw.org with "Withdraw
      permit" in the subject line.
  • Curbside Lane Permits – On Monday, October 26 curbside lane permit holders are scheduled to receive a personalized email from the SFMTA to renew, extend or change the existing permit. The email contains a personalized link to a permit renewal form. This webform must be completed by November 15, to be guaranteed a permit renewal by December 31.
    • If the curbside lane zone being permitted extends in front of a neighboring property, written consent for the permittee to occupy that area through June 30, 2021 from the affected neighboring property owner(s) must be provided.
    • If the curbside lane zone has a fixed structure or deck, a signed form and photos must be provided as described in the Shared Spaces Design Guidelines.
  • Street Closure Permits – To extend the Street Closure permit beyond December 31, the permittee must submit a new application for Street Closure Permit on the Shared Spaces website.
  • Private Property Permits – Valid through the end of the State of Public Emergency. No action is needed from the permittee.
  • Port Property Permits – To renew, email SharedSpaces@sfport.com requesting renewal.
  • Recreation and Parks Department Property Permits – Permittees will be contacted by the Recreation and Parks Department in the coming weeks about extending Outdoor Dining and Outdoor Fitness Permits. The availability of facilities for outdoor fitness classes may change due to the change in seasons or the reopening of facilities previously closed by the health order.
  • Just Add Music (JAM) Permits – If the JAM permit is associated with a Shared Space, the Shared Space permit must be renewed in order for the JAM permit to remain valid. JAM permits not associated with Shared Spaces do not need to be renewed at this time.

Small Business Impact Survey

During these difficult times, the city is working to help small businesses. If you are a business owner or operator, please take the short survey below to help evaluate the Shared Spaces Program. Please fill out a separate survey for each business that you operate.

Survey: ENGLISH  /  ESPANOL  /  中文  /  PILIPINO  /  TING VIT

 

The 18th Street Shared Space with people eating and walking with traffic cones to prevent cars.

The Castro area on 18th Street is open for people each Sunday. Check out our website for a full list of Shared Space street closures.

More Information

To learn more about the program, track applications or apply, please visit our website or email SharedSpaces@sfgov.org

 

 



Published October 23, 2020 at 02:28AM
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الاثنين، 19 أكتوبر 2020

SFMTA Staff Recognized for Putting Riders First

SFMTA Staff Recognized for Putting Riders First
By Bradley Dunn

SFMTA staff were honored for their work to keep the city moving during the San Francisco Transit Riders’ Rider First Awards last Friday. The nonprofit organization that aims to better transit in San Francisco gave awards to several members of the SFMTA’s hard-working staff who put Muni customers first. 

“It's as important as ever that we come together to show our appreciation for all those people working hard to make Muni better every day for riders, despite all the challenges,” the San Francisco Transit Riders said of the awards. 

The San Francisco Transit Riders present awards to Perry Poole, Johnny Siu, Celso Abueg at West Portal Station.

The San Francisco Transit Riders present awards to Perry Poole, Johnny Siu, Celso Abueg at West Portal Station.

The Transit Riders presented awards to: 

  • Myra Phillips and the Car Cleaner team for developing and instituting new cleaning protocols and systems in a quick and effective response to the pandemic, 

  • Dickson Yee and the Personal Protective Equipment team for tireless work making sure our Muni operators and staff have personal protective equipment, 

  • Cable car operators Perry Poole, Johnny Siu, Celso Abueg and Sam Eversly for stepping up in a new role as ambassadors and using their customer service skills out to the streets to help direct people during all the service changes, 

  • Public Information Officer Enrique Aguilar for visual communications that helped the public understand service changes and the importance of transit lanes, 

  • Jason Lee for  ushering the biggest improvement in customer information in two decades through design and the SFMTA Board serving as the Program Manager for the Next Generation Customer Information System, 

  • Felix Castillo for being a voice for his fellow Muni Operators during the pandemic, 

  • Shaun Reeves, a Muni Operator, who helped transport homeless San Franciscans under investigation for COVID-19 infection in the early days of the shelter-in-place. 

You can watch the SF Transit Riders’ Rider First Awards ceremony here. “This year has shown once again that Muni is the critical transportation link for our essential workforce. People who are riding Muni throughout this crisis are the critical workers doing the essential tasks we depend on during these difficult times,” the organization said. “They're also the people who depend on Muni to access services We have always known #TransitIsEssential.” 

The SFMTA congratulates the staff who won awards for their dedication to our customers.  



Published October 20, 2020 at 02:16AM
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الأربعاء، 14 أكتوبر 2020

الثلاثاء، 13 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: Too long to study and make a Presentation?!! https://ift.tt/311VKq0

Show HN: Too long to study and make a Presentation?!! https://ift.tt/3n3eNJU Convert PDF to PPT Online - AI Tool for Presenters Creates PPT by summarizing the document Make presentations with less effort Save time and money Takes PDF as input October 13, 2020 at 01:26PM

الاثنين، 12 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: AI Generated Short Video https://ift.tt/3iS1sRE

Show HN: AI Generated Short Video Hey everyone, I have always wanted to content. I enjoy creating videos and watching other's creations! Being a programmer, I decided to create an AI pipeline which can create textual scripts and churn out thousands of videos / blogs on a daily basis given any topic. This is my first video and I would appreciate any comments and suggestions regarding it but I am particularly interested in hearing about tips and tricks / content format which can be followed to make the such video more fun and intuitive to watch. Also looking for advice if this can be monetised maybe saas or ads or something completely different. I would also want to know if anyone of you would be interested in such an AI tool. The Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1J_DOIPGKsw Specifically, what I wanted to ask: What are the specific things you liked and what you didn't. Would there have been a better format for me to have made this video to deliver the message more effectively? Are there any concepts things I can look up that may help me improve my videos generation. Thank you again! October 12, 2020 at 11:24PM

Show HN: Scheme for Max – Script and Live Code Max/MSP and Ableton Live https://ift.tt/372ecm6

Show HN: Scheme for Max – Script and Live Code Max/MSP and Ableton Live https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErirIFCTdjg&t=3s&ab_channel=MusicwithLisp October 11, 2020 at 07:51PM

Show HN: SFTPGo 1.1.0 released with multi-protocols support https://ift.tt/2GValwt

Show HN: SFTPGo 1.1.0 released with multi-protocols support SFTPGo is a fully featured and highly configurable SFTP server with optional FTP/S and WebDAV support, written in Go. It can serve local filesystem, S3 or Google Cloud Storage. The most notable change in this release is the multi-protocols support. Full details here: https://ift.tt/3lCoX2y October 11, 2020 at 09:22AM

السبت، 10 أكتوبر 2020

الجمعة، 9 أكتوبر 2020

الخميس، 8 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: Saved articles, in a zine, delivered every month https://ift.tt/30KLfHq

Show HN: Saved articles, in a zine, delivered every month Hi HN, [yorgos_kats][1] posted [My Screen Break][2], which looks really nice! People sent me messages about it because it has a lot in common with what I'm working on: [Walden Pond][3] ( https://ift.tt/3nvO5tD ). You connect your [Pocket][4] account, and once a month you get a printed magazine. You can subscribe for 1, 2 or 4 hours of reading time. I got my 7th one on [Monday this week][5]. We deliver anywhere in the world, except Antarctica. It has been a pandemic project to build it as a "real" product, but I've been making these zines for my friends for a bit over 2 years now. This means that I've come across and fixed an amazing number of edge cases! I initially started building it because I couldn't find anything that did the job. I've since turned up [Quarto][6] by [Elan Kiderman][7], which is similar; [newspaperclub.com][8] had a product that did something along these lines but using their presses, and as [jamez][9] noted in the replies to [yorgos_kats][1] post, [Memeoirs][10]; and [pulp][11] by [Outofthebot][12], but that's shut down. The pagination is done using [Paged.js][13], and their community has been super helpful. It's amazing what can be done with the holy trinity of HTML, CSS & JS. If you want to see some pictures of the physical thing, take a look at [Instagram][14] and [Twitter][15]. [1]: https://ift.tt/36KTA1R [2]: https://ift.tt/30wVtv2 [3]: https://ift.tt/3nvO5tD [4]: http://getpocket.com/ [5]: https://twitter.com/notionparallax/status/1313313422499483648?s=20 [6]: https://ift.tt/3lqk2Sr [7]: http://elankiderman [8]: https://ift.tt/30O3yLV [9]: https://ift.tt/3iMRiS6 [10]: https://ift.tt/2GTCSSP [11]: https://getpulp.io/ [12]: https://ift.tt/3iGGsgr [13]: https://ift.tt/3266hjp [14]: https://ift.tt/3iIfeGl [15]: https://twitter.com/WaldenPondZine October 9, 2020 at 02:08AM

Launch HN: Doppler (YC W19) – Easily manage your env vars and secrets https://ift.tt/3nD1dNZ

Launch HN: Doppler (YC W19) – Easily manage your env vars and secrets Brian here - I am one of the creators of Doppler and I’m pumped (and kinda nervous!) to share it with HN. Doppler is an easy way to manage and share environment variables and secrets -- things like API keys, database credentials, feature flags, and configuration like a port or a hostname. We’ve heard it's “GitHub for secrets”. While working at Uber and small startups, managing app config via env vars really sucked. Simple options like .env files were a nightmare to keep updated. Enterprise tools like HashiCorp Vault and AWS Parameter Store felt like we were stuck using FTP instead of Dropbox! For the past 2 years, we’ve been heads-down building a secrets manager we actually want to use. For our customers, it's now their central source of truth for secrets and app configuration. They use Doppler to quickly organize and sync secrets with teammates and across infra, from local to prod on every stack. It has the features you'd want in a secrets manager, like sharing, audit logs, versioning, and integrations with major cloud providers (AWS, GCP, Heroku, Docker, Netlify, Laravel Forge, etc.). We’re deeply committed to strong security controls and highly available infra. Best-practices like data tokenization, security driven design, and external pentests help keep us secure: https://ift.tt/3iPYtsZ . And fully managed encrypted fallbacks in your infra means your secrets are always available, even in the rare case we aren’t. To support our community, we’re committed to offering a community plan that's free forever for unlimited users. Paid plans start at $6/seat/month. For visual learners like me, here's a 4-min video of us installing Doppler: https://ift.tt/33GHSn5 . Take a look if you're curious: https://doppler.com . Let us know what you think! October 8, 2020 at 05:03PM

الأربعاء، 7 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: Weekly trivia app for “async” fun that just crossed 100k ARR https://ift.tt/36GRNux

Show HN: Weekly trivia app for “async” fun that just crossed 100k ARR Hi everyone! I left my job as a PM at Lyft (Citi Bike, technically) in March to dive full-time into my passion project (watercoolertrivia.com). As of two weeks ago, our tiny team of three (and I'm the only one full-time) crossed the 100k ARR mark. It's been a complete blast to bootstrap this into existence. One of the co-founders and I hosted pub trivia in college which was the genesis of this idea, 7 (!) years ago. Happy to answer any questions at all about the business or about our decision to bootstrap instead of raise venture money. October 8, 2020 at 12:15AM

Show HN: Scalable pan/zoom with easy authoring, arbitrary datatypes https://ift.tt/36Ibx0W

Show HN: Scalable pan/zoom with easy authoring, arbitrary datatypes https://ift.tt/3nlL0MV Open source MIT project from Turing award winner Michael Stonebraker. Seeking contributors. October 7, 2020 at 06:03PM

الثلاثاء، 6 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: Placekey – An ID for Every Place https://ift.tt/36C0rur

Show HN: Placekey – An ID for Every Place Hi, HN, I'm Roshan and I'm part of the team that's launching the Placekey today at https://placekey.io. It is a free and open universal standard identifier we built so that data pertaining to places can be shared across organizations easily. A Placekey is a short identifier that has Address and POI sections detailing What is at a place and a section describing Where on the globe the place is. Eventually, there will be a Placekey for every place in the world, even those without postal addresses. US geospatial data from a large array of partners https://ift.tt/34sccRy can already be associated and cross-referenced using Placekey. By allowing every place to be represented by a canonical string, data scientists and researchers can easily join datasets and share geospatial information with each other. Generating a Placekey will always be free, whether you do so using https://placekey.io or the API available at https://dev.placekey.io. And storing a Placekey is permitted for any reason, whether you want to cache it, use it to exchange information with someone else, or to fulfill any other purpose you can think of. Finally, any requests you make to the Placekey API are completely private. They will be used to improve Placekey's matching and resolution, but will never be shared with or sold to third parties. Some more details are in our: * FAQ - https://placekey.io/faq * API Documentation - https://ift.tt/2SwuxqX Try generating one at https://placekey.io/ No signup required. Let us know your thoughts! October 6, 2020 at 06:33PM

الاثنين، 5 أكتوبر 2020

Slow Streets are Full Steam Ahead

Slow Streets are Full Steam Ahead
By Benjamin Barnett

Bikers on Noe Street

Last week, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors ruled against four California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) appeals that have been delaying Slow Streets, temporary emergency transit-only lanes, bike lanes and emergency street closures. Within 12 hours of the Board’s decision, SFMTA crews were back out in full force to implement these critical initiatives that help keep San Francisco moving during the pandemic. 

The Board of Supervisors ruled unanimously that these temporary projects are deemed critical to the city’s emergency response efforts, preventing a further delay. 

Implementation of new Slow Streets was put on hold while we waited for the appeals hearings, giving crews the opportunity to focus on filling in the signage gaps and repairing existing Slow Streets to improve the network. 

Now, crews are bringing you more Slow Streets to connect our city. These improvements are needed to move about in these unusual times. The Slow Streets are welcoming, accessible, and allow for physical distance for people who want to travel on foot, bicycle, wheelchair, scooter, skateboard, or other forms of micro-mobility in San Francisco. Slow Streets attract users of the full array of neighborhood demographics—including children, older adults, people with disabilities and people of color. 

After the hearing, new Slow Streets were installed on Clay and Noe streets and Pacific and Tompkins avenues, bringing the current total to 20 Slow Streets corridors and 38 miles of Slow Streets: 

  • 20th Avenue from Lincoln Boulevard to Ortega Street 
  • 20th Street from Valencia Street to Potrero Avenue 
  • 23rd Avenue from Lake to Cabrillo streets 
  • 41st Avenue from Lincoln Way to Vicente Street 
  • Clay Street from Arguello Boulevard to Steiner Street (New) 
  • Chenery Street from Burnside Avenue to Lippard Avenue 
  • Excelsior Avenue from London to Munich streets 
  • Golden Gate Avenue from Masonic Avenue to Broderick Street 
  • Kirkham Street from 7th Ave to Great Highway 
  • Lake Street from 28th to Second avenues 
  • Lombard between Mason and Powell streets 
  • Mariposa Street from Kansas to Texas streets 
  • Noe Street from 18th to Duboce streets (New) 
  • Ortega Street from 47th to 15th avenues 
  • Pacific Avenue from Steiner to Gough streets (New) 
  • Page Street from Stanyan to Gough streets 
  • Sanchez Street from 23rd to 30th streets 
  • Shotwell Street from Cesar Chavez to 14th Street 
  • Somerset Street from Silver Avenue to Woolsey Street 
  • Tompkins Avenue from Andover to Putnam streets (New) 

Plans are underway to continue expanding the Slow Streets network, with new Slow Streets scheduled for implementation this week on 20th Street between San Bruno and Pennsylvania avenues, Arkansas between 23rd and 17th streets, Duncan between Guerrero and Sanchez streets, and Minnesota between Mariposa and 22nd streets. The full network of approved Slow Streets is expected to be built out by the end of October. Implementation of the additional Slow Streets corridors is currently being planned with input from neighborhoods, community groups, and elected officials.  

We’re also always taking suggestions for new Slow Streets. Want to suggest a street for Slow Streets Phase 4? Good candidates for Slow Streets are lower-traffic residential streets, without large hills, and that connect neighbors to essential services in the absence of Muni service. They will be vetted for feasibility and exclude Muni routes and major emergency traffic corridors. Please take our survey and help us plan out Phase Four.

Slow Streets are for essential trips,  not neighborhood gathering points. As required by the public health ordinance, everyone should bring their required  face covering and maintain proper physical distance from people outside their households.  To make sure Slow Streets are being used properly, staff are continuously monitoring this program for its effectiveness.  

For updates and additional information on the SFMTA’s Slow Street Program, visit the program webpage at SFMTA.com/SlowStreets. Please also visit our website for the latest agency updates about our COVID-19 response.  



Published October 06, 2020 at 02:01AM
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Show HN: Turn your “read later” folder into a physical book https://ift.tt/3jAEzmD

Show HN: Turn your “read later” folder into a physical book Hi HN! Being locked down with plenty of time in my hands, I clearly noticed a problem that I faced and also felt passionate about tackling. - Excessive screen time in our day-to-day - Diminishing attention spans It was consistently tough to properly read quality longform content online. From screen related tiredness to having ads and notifications pop up and demand a share of my attention, my focus was compromised. Long story short, I wanted to read longform content that lives online (and there is a ton of high quality out there), in an inherent offline medium, paper :p Fast forward 5 months, we just published the beta of myscreenbreak.com. We are redesigning webpages from scratch and making them print optimised. While we aim to be able to deliver physical books by q1 2021, our current print-at-home version for single articles and collections can give you an indicative idea of how v1 product will look like. If there are any other paper/book loving weirdos out there, happy to hear and learn from them :) October 5, 2020 at 08:08PM

Show HN: A site to help you validate ideas in bulk https://ift.tt/3ixcPhu

Show HN: A site to help you validate ideas in bulk Hi HN! I made a really quick web app to help people validate their ideas. The app is a simple landing page builder, but every page includes a really simple Yes/No "Are You Interested?" poll. Every vote is recorded and tracked, and if they click yes they are brought to a page where they can submit an email. This makes validating ideas super easy because you can post your link to different communities and get statistically significant results as well as build an email list. Given an hour, you could easily create 50 different landing pages and be able to validate your ideas in bulk. The site (click Sign Up in top right - no cc needed): https://ift.tt/33wXQzW Example landing page (Built in <60s): https://areyouinterested.co/site/pals-insurance October 5, 2020 at 06:16PM

Show HN : Search Engine for Free Music Ranked by Usage of Youtubers https://ift.tt/3nlvD7a

Show HN : Search Engine for Free Music Ranked by Usage of Youtubers Hi guys! As a Youtube creator, I've always spent great amount of time finding legitimate and relevant music for the videos. And I've frequently found great Creative Commons music, in Youtube videos of other creators I like. So I decided to build a simple website where creators can search for Creative Commons music used by Youtube creators and ranked by usage in Youtube videos. I think this service may help video creators reduce time spent on finding free and relevant music, by checking what music other great creators have used in their videos. But before I jump into coding this service, I wanna know If there is any actual need for it. Please let me know if you're gonna need this service when finding music for the video, by opting into beta test in the link below. Thanks! http://www.youtubgm.com October 5, 2020 at 05:59PM

الأحد، 4 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: Learning Project: building an imperative language https://ift.tt/3is35F9

Show HN: Learning Project: building an imperative language Hi! I am doing a learning project, attempting to build an imperative language (and interpreter). The end product will be useless for others, I just want to learn and better understand how to build imperative languages. :) If someone else shares this interest and want to give some good hints on good resources I would be grateful. Currently I am looking at an awesome text by Bob Nystrom. All suggestions and tips on resources are most welcome. I am very much a beginner in this, but I find this topic very fascinating. Mail me or post links here! Cheers! You can try a beta version Online at https://ift.tt/2Gnkdz2. GitHub: https://ift.tt/3kziRQi October 4, 2020 at 02:26PM

السبت، 3 أكتوبر 2020

الجمعة، 2 أكتوبر 2020

History In Motion: SFMTA Staffer Sheds Light on Muni Vehicles Past and Present in New Book

History In Motion: SFMTA Staffer Sheds Light on Muni Vehicles Past and Present in New Book
By Jeremy Menzies

In 2019, SFMTA Transit Planner Paul Bignardi completed a book that will provide hours of history exploration for the avid Muni fan. Bignardi’s A Fleet History of the San Francisco Municipal Railway is a great new addition to Muni history literature with a biography of every Muni vehicle extending back to the beginning of the railway in 1912.

Author Paul Bignardi poses with Sacramento-Clay Cable Car 19 “Big 19” after its restoration in 2019.

Author Paul Bignardi poses with Sacramento-Clay Cable Car 19 “Big 19” after its restoration in 2019.

Bignardi says, “The biggest historic vehicle thrill I’ve had is being allowed to be a part of the return of Cable Car “Big 19” into service as the oldest publicly owned electric-powered transit vehicle in the world in summer 2019.”

The effort, a labor of love, began with the centennial of the SF Municipal Railway in 2012. Muni was celebrating its 100th birthday and a group of self-identified transit nerds banded together to start compiling and researching the most up-to-date information on Muni’s fleet past and present. The centennial had prompted them to realize that much of the data on the fleet had stagnated since the publication of Inside Muni in 1981.

As Bignardi mulled over the problem, he came up with a plan to create a more comprehensive volume on the subject. “I thought I should produce the list for internal use, and then I thought if I was going to do that work, I should go the final step and just produce a book. I thought it would take about six months to complete. I finished nearly three years later.”

Much more than just a list of old buses, the book includes a service history and statistics for every vehicle that has ever been in the Muni fleet, including those inherited from private transit companies merged with the Railway. Every type is included from cable to rail to rubber tire. As Paul himself notes, “the book contains the most detailed and accurate information on the San Francisco cable car fleet in the Muni era.”  On top of vehicle information, the book also includes facts and figures on transit facilities, ridership and fare trends over the last 100+ years, and even info on the various paint schemes and logos used by Muni since 1912.

A lineup of Muni vehicles and Muni Operator of the Month awardees in 1963.

A lineup of Muni vehicles and Muni Operator of the Month awardees in 1963.

On top of including plenty of raw information to soak up, the book is full of great photos both historic and modern, including many from the SFMTA Photo Archive.  No doubt, this volume of vehicles will prove invaluable to historians and transit fans alike. If you’re wondering where you might pick up a copy for your own perusal, our preservation partners at the SF Railway Museum have copies over in their online store (LINK). Proceeds will support the preservation of historic vehicles running on the 25-year-old F-Line.

Interested in learning more about San Francisco’s transportation history?  Check out our self-guided walking tour and kids history scavenger hunt at the SF History Days event, that had its virtual launch on September 25th.

 



Published October 02, 2020 at 07:23PM
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الخميس، 1 أكتوبر 2020

Show HN: Cargenta – We Make Cars Connected https://ift.tt/36qgefx

Show HN: Cargenta – We Make Cars Connected Show HN: Cargenta – We Make Cars Connected Hi HN, I’m Emil and I'm the founder of Cargenta (https://ift.tt/3ifVjOI). We produce plug & play IoT devices for car owners to connect their ordinary car to the Internet and use a smart phone to get the vehicle real time location, health status, receive maintenance assistance and configure advanced security and safety features. Many years ago, it started with a problem: Maintaining my car was too expensive and time consuming. I am a techie and a problem solver at heart, so I decided to check how can I efficiently solve my problem. Efficiently is the keyword here. It turned out there weren’t many good solutions. I mostly found car diagnostics tools and the decent ones were expensive, professional units, definitely not suited for someone who wants it just for his car. So I thought: OK then, let’s build a simple and affordable diagnostics device that anyone can use. This is how I started working on Cargenta Brain. Now, after years of hard work, the product is finally ready for the market and it ended up having much more useful features than just diagnostics. In a nutshell, it is an IoT device that is installed in the car OBDII port and can connect any contemporary car to the Internet. Then, the driver can interact with his car from anywhere. The technology as such is not new but the approach to delivering value out if it is. Most of all, it is a multi-purpose device: It integrates OBDII reader chip, GPS, GSM/GPRS, Bluetooth, Gyroscope, Battery and a Sim Card. The beauty of it is that we provide the HW device and the internet data plan for it in a bundle. So, people just need to plug it in, and it works. The mobile apps for iOS and Android are free to use. We are soon to launch Kickstarter campaign. In the meantime, users can sign up at our website, where we have prepared some gifts and discounts for our early supporters. Below are the currently available features: * Read & Clear Vehicle Fault Codes (DTCs) * 24/7 Vehicle Health Monitoring * Remote Vehicle Diagnostics * Live GPS Location Tracking * Location & Route History * Maintenance Reminders * Maintenance History * Live Vehicle Sensor Data: Speed, RPM, Calculated Load Value, Coolant Temperature, Fuel System Status, Short/Long Term Fuel Trim, Fault Codes & more * Automatic Notifications in case of: Technical Problem, Crash, Theft, Towing, Over speeding, Geofence Breach, Battery Failure, Car Movement, Engine Start, Maintenance Due & more * Reports: Fuel Consumption, Average Speed, Top Speed, Mileage Driven, Route, Driving Behavior & more Features we might add in the future (please, comment below if you’d like to have any of them): * Car Configurator – configure dashboard, lights, windows, instruments and features. Encode car modules, reset maintenance indicator. * Car Remote Control - remote start and stop the engine, lock and unlock doors, turn air condition or heating, etc. * Usage Based Insurance – auto insurance quotes based on personal driving habits. Drivers who drive less or drive safe pay less. This is a much debated feature, so we’d like to hear your thoughts about it. Next steps: The hardware devices and the platform that we are building right now, are not tremendously groundbreaking but…we must start from somewhere. So, we start with something simple - a product that people need. We then use the knowledge and experience to take the technology to the next level. Here is our vision for the future: Universal Vehicle to Everything Communication (V2X) for better safety on the roads, saving lives and enabling faster introduction of self-driving technologies. The basic idea is to make all cars talk to each other and get live updates of their surroundings, speed, direction, braking, traffic flow, hazards ahead etc. That’s the plan. Execution is to follow. Community Driven: Right now, we are focused on our Cargenta Brain unit and want to provide features that make sense to the users. That’s why we want to hear from you! Please, share below any thoughts, advice or recommendations that you believe will help us improve. Beta users: We need limited number of beta users for specific countries to test the network coverage. If interested in participating, please send us an email: support@cargenta.com. Get involved: If you like the project and want to be part of it, let us know: support@cargenta.com Final thoughts. As many of you know, making hardware is hard. Consumer hardware is even harder. It’s capital and resource intensive and even the big tech companies struggle to get it right. For startups, the success rate is extremely low. Yet, if we give up before even trying only because it is hard, how can we hope to ever achieve something great? Thank you for your time spent reading this post! [1] Website: https://ift.tt/3ifVjOI [2] Product video: https://youtu.be/j3XQn-H3Mnw [3] Recommendations for features: https://ift.tt/3jl7TO9 October 1, 2020 at 11:09PM