A Bullshit-Free Guide to the Gear You Need to Commute By Bike

A Bullshit-Free Guide to the Gear You Need to Commute By Bike

So you’re thinking about commuting to work by bike this summer? Congratulations, your life is about to get a zillion times more fun. But where to begin? The insular world of cycling can seem a little, uh, confusing to those unfamiliar with it—it’s hard to know what you really need to get started riding.

Read more…


    



Depression-Era Teachers Predicted Online Schools Would Look Like This

Depression-Era Teachers Predicted Online Schools Would Look Like This

In 1934 the president of Northwestern University, Walter Dill Scott, predicted that technology would radically change the college experience.

Read more…


    



For the Love of God, Stop Wearing Your Bike Helmet the Wrong Way

For the Love of God, Stop Wearing Your Bike Helmet the Wrong Way

Many of us at WIRED ride bikes as a part of our daily commute, or for sport. So do a lot of other people in the Bay Area. And every few weeks (or sooner), we notice something: Someone is wearing …

    



This Bike Jacket Uses Embedded Glass “Pixels” to Light Up the Night

This Bike Jacket Uses Embedded Glass "Pixels" to Light Up the Night

With an increasing number of bikes now sharing American roads with vehicle traffic, it’s more important than ever to be as visible as you can on two wheels, especially at night. But with the Zap commuter jacket from Sugoi, that won’t be much of a problem.

Read more…


    



Watch These Crazy Animations of How Three Cities Commute

Watch These Crazy Animations of How Three Cities Commute

New York City mostly rides transit, Los Angeles loves its cars, and San Francisco has a dedicated population of bike commuters. UC Berkeley planning Ph.D. student Fletcher Foti recently built a brilliant data visualization that brings these facts to life by animating commuting patterns for the Bay Area, L.A., and NYC.

Read more…


    



The World’s Longest Bus Is a Traffic Nightmare Waiting To Happen [Transportation]

Public transit is a great way to reduce traffic and gridlock in a crowded city. But do those benefits still apply when the streets are filled with 100 foot buses like the Fraunhofer Institute’s AutoTram Extra Grand? Forget tight corners; this thing might not even make it through a green light. More »

Nokia Drive 3.0 arrives with My Commute, your Lumia is no excuse for being late (video)

Nokia Drive 30 arrives with My Commute, your Lumia is no excuse for being late video

Nokia gave us a hint of Nokia Drive 3.0’s commuter-friendly additions all the way back at Mobile World Congress in February. It’s been quite the wait, but the update is at last lurking in the Windows Phone Marketplace. Although developed at the same time as Google Now, the Drive update will feel like a small slice of Android 4.1 for Lumia owners through its predictive routing: it can learn when you leave for work and how driving habits will affect the trip, giving a heads-up about traffic jams before you turn the ignition. Windows Phone reasserts itself through the option of pinning favorite destinations as tiles on the home screen, and an automatic switch between day and night modes is just as new. Drive’s My Commute feature will initially work only in the US, but it should be available within the next day or two for any Lumia owner — so those being denied Windows Phone 8 still won’t have any justification for being late to the office.

Continue reading Nokia Drive 3.0 arrives with My Commute, your Lumia is no excuse for being late (video)

Filed under: ,

Nokia Drive 3.0 arrives with My Commute, your Lumia is no excuse for being late (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Jul 2012 21:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Symbian Tweet  |  sourceNokia Conversations  | Email this | Comments

Trulia Maps Show You the Fastest Way to Get Anywhere, Now [Maps]

Google Maps can tell you how long it’s going to take you to get from a specific point A to point B. But Trulia’s new commuter maps tell you how long it will take to get anywhere at all—not just to and from a specific destination. More »