StratoBus Airship Prototype Sets 5 Year Airborne Target

StratoBus Airship Prototype Sets 5 Year Airborne TargetThere really isn’t anything new under the sun, as you can see from the fashion cycles that tend to repeat themselves from time to time. I am still waiting for the moment where big is beautiful instead of the waif-like models that we still see strut the catwalk and selfies online. Having said that, it seems that blimps and zeppelins do have a special place in the hearts of many, as the U.S. Army even intends to use spy blimps for future conflicts. StratoBus intends to be part of the blimp future, where it is an airship that was specially designed to travel all the way to the Earth’s stratosphere.

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    6 Freeway Removals That Changed Their Cities Forever

    6 Freeway Removals That Changed Their Cities Forever

    It seems counterintuitive, right? Rip out eight lanes of freeway through the middle of your metropolis and you’ll be rewarded with not only less traffic, but safer, more efficient cities? But it’s true, and it’s happening in places all over the world.

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    Segway SE Personal Transporters bring off-road capability

    Segway has been around for a long time and has been making some of the geekiest and coolest personal transportation devices around. The electric transports that Segway makes are controlled … Continue reading

    Text While Driving In The Bay Area And You Might End Up On A Billboard

    Text While Driving In The Bay Area And You Might End Up On A Billboard

    This month, some residents of San Francisco might discover photographs of themselves engaging in rather embarrassing behavior. A website has been collecting photos of people texting while driving, and some of those photos have now found their way onto billboards throughout the region.

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    3D Printed Kayak Actually Works

    3D Printed Kayak Actually Works3D printers seem to be catching on in fashion among enthusiasts and home users, and most of the time, we would think of 3D printers churning out tiny bits and pieces which would look a whole lot better as a toy, rather than to make up an entire water-based transport. Just what am I referring to? A 3D printed kayak, of course! Jim Smith of Grass Roots Engineering has been working on his own home-based, large-scale 3D printer for the past five years plus, and his latest modification involved churning out 28 colorful ABS plastic sections which were then bolted. The result? A 16.7 ft-long kayak that actually works!

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    This Beautifully Simple App Wants to Change How Public Transit Works

    This Beautifully Simple App Wants to Change How Public Transit Works

    Public transit is a hard problem. Imagine how difficult it is for a city to meet the needs of millions, all of whom want to go different places at different times. And, inevitably, you’re left standing on the platform. Ototo wants to change all of that.

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    Continuing our inadvertent Snøhetta theme today, the Norwegian architecture firm has also proposed t

    Continuing our inadvertent Snøhetta theme today, the Norwegian architecture firm has also proposed this fuselage-like metro station for downtown Mecca, Saudi Arabia. The outer skin of the building—a long tube enclosing a station on the city’s Metro-C line—would be surfaced with ceramic tiles "developed in cooperation with local artists." This joins other large-scale rail projects on the Arabian peninsula. [Snøhetta]

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    Springfield Should Be Ashamed About the State Of Its Public Transit

    Springfield Should Be Ashamed About the State Of Its Public Transit

    A city as progressive as Springfield—renowned globally for its renewable energy production—should be on the forefront of public transit innovation. But as we’ve learned this week, Springfield is rife with transportation shortcomings.

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    MetroMile Worries About Street Sweeping Tickets So You Don’t Have To

    MetroMile Worries About Street Sweeping Tickets So You Dont Have To
    MetroMile is a connected driving startup that aims to “reinvent urban driving.” It has announced a new feature today, one that will help drivers avoid one of the most common parking tickets – street sweeping. It happens quite often, you park your car unaware of faded, painted curb warnings only to return and find a ticket on your windshield. In San Francisco the city collected over $29 million from street sweeping tickets alone in 2011, and ticket prices have increased over the years, currently its a $64 ticket. MetroMile offers a very simple solution.

    Using the MetroMile app and Metronome device, both available for free, drivers can simply park their cars without having to worry about the ticket. If they park in a zone where street sweeping is to take place within 12 hours, MetroMile will send drivers an email as well as a push notification on their smartphones to tell them that they’re parked in a street cleaning zone. Another reminder will be sent one hour before street cleaning is due to begin.

    In cities like San Francisco, this app is very useful. It probably won’t serve much purpose in cities like Paris, where streets are cleaned without clearing cars from curbs. Parking ticket fines in Paris are actually quite low, a regular ticket is 17 Euros, and if that is not paid within 45 hours, it goes up to 33 Euros. Even if the car is parked in a forbidden area, such as a fire lane, tickets start at just 35 Euros.

    Cost of living might be comparable between San Francisco and Paris, but that doesn’t change the fact that citizens of the former have to worry about then often unavoidable street sweeping ticket. MetroMile will go a long way to put drivers in the city at ease. The feature will be available for all drivers by March 31st. It only covers San Francisco for now, more cities will be added in the future.

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    Luxury Electric Car for Kids Comes With 4-Wheel Drive, Sound System

    Luxury Electric Car for Kids Comes With 4-Wheel Drive, Sound System

    If your lemonade stand has strong sales this summer, you might be able to buy a new scooter. But that kid who owns a chain of neighborhood lemonade stands from Elm St. to Main? That kid rolls in a third-generation …