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New Tech Guesses

Finally a date

News is officially out. Apple’s event will be on April 20. This is good news for those of us just champing at the bit to see what they pull off next. Here’s to hoping.

Categories
New Tech Guesses

Not March 23rd, but April 6

It appears that the March 23rd date, was a rumor to help track down some leakers. However, evidence is pointing towards an even sooner rather than later. At present, several devices are showing on Amazon as not being in stock until April 7, and a MacRumors member found a case for a iPad Pro (2021), for sale at a Target, that wasn’t supposed to be on the shelves until April 6.

This leads me to believe that we will getting our even still. It will likely be April 6th, with new iPads available either later that day, or on April 7. There is a small possibility that the event will be March 30th, but for that to be the case, invitations would go out on the 22nd, 23rd, or 24th. We’ll all soon find out.

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New

Rethinking Public/Mass Transportation

Throughout the last two decades of the 20th Century, and the first two of the 21st, railroads have been disappearing. Often being torn up and turned into abandoned right-of-way, turned into trails, or just abandoned with rails left in place. I contend that these actions are the antithesis of responsible planning, and these rails need to be reused for other purposes.

The Rails-to-Trails Disaster

Rails-to-Trails is a program where local governments are donated or purchase railroad ROW, and they convert it to trails. It seems like a great idea, but it is actually a horrible idea. Most of the rails-to-trails projects involve removing existing rail infrastructure, and replacing it with a non-permeable surface, usually asphalt or concrete. Both of these surfaces are actually quite bad for your body to walk on, and without proper footwear can cause impact damage to your body. On top of that, these trails rip out millions of dollars in rail infrastructure, including the ties/sleepers, rails, crossings, specialize traffic signals, and bridges. All of these trails should have instead been turned into either regional commuter rail or light rail/streetcar, it would greatly reduce the cost to add rail to the region/city, and it is already near housing and businesses. This reduces the burden to municipalities or transit operators to add higher capacity modes, but also has a built-in customer base, it isn’t being built away from population centers to reduce cost, which also mean that fewer people will need to drive to access the rails. If for some reason rail is not desirable for mass transit at this time, some minor modification to the ROW can be done, without removing the rails, to allow for BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) to use the ROW, until there is demand for rail.

One Mode to Rule Them All (Not)

Too many system focus on running a single mode of non-bus transportation. However, the most successful systems in the world use multiple modes to achieve the goals of serving their populations. London uses subway/metro, heavy rail, light rail, and trams to cover its population, along with regional rail. Tokyo uses bullet trains, subway/metro, heavy rail, light rail, trams, and monorail to cover its people. To meet the transportation needs of a region, multiple systems must be used, in order to best serve the community. Have a lot of hills? Use subways, buses, and/or monorail to ensure reliable service. Have lots of low-lying land? Use trams or light rail to move people around.

Public vs Private Funding

Most of the best systems in the world, London, New York, Tokyo, etc; all started as private enterprises. This seems to be the best way to ensure that systems are build to cover the most number of people, as the private enterprises want to make as much money as possible, with as little out of pocket cost. Some, like Tokyo, are still privately owned and operated. Systems that are started by governments, are usually designed around creating new communities, rather than serving and improving those that are already in existence. Not to say that their goals in creating transit orientated development is bad, just that it alienates tax payers to not be served by the transit systems they are paying for, or still having to drive some distance to reach these routes.

Love ’em or hate ’em, Buses are Good

Buses are often maligned for being the “poor mans transit”. While they are traditionally the cheapest for users, they can be improved greatly to be on par with fixed route transit. The easiest way to do that is to increase service. Move towards multiple vehicles per hour, something similar to what you would get on a fixed-route service. This will help the service to fit into peoples’ lives, and make it more attractive for commuting, as well as being much more reliable to connect with other routes, without long transfer times. Also, if you have a major arterial that has a large number of traffic signals, and also a lot of traffic, consider locating bus transit on adjacent, parallel streets. By removing buses from the arterial, you will usually increase reliability, especially if you prevent normal vehicular traffic from said roadway or at least prevent if from continuing the entire length. Preferring or requiring pre-payment of fares is also a great thing to improve buses. It makes the bus more like a metro service, and drastically increases the speed of embarking and disembarking. Ticket machines on the platforms, as well as accepting NFC payments goes a long way towards increasing the viability of buses.

Don’t skimp because of size

You may not live in a large metropolitan area, or even a metro at all. That doesn’t mean that public transportation shouldn’t be important. It means you have a greater chance of actually being able to keep up with the future, if you start now. If you have disused or abandoned rail lines, push to keep them, and plan for future uses. Get a bus system started, even if you just have one route running at 30 minutes intervals, that can go a long way towards encouraging changes in mentalities. Start a shuttle to the major job centers, shopping districts, etc. If people see the bus in places they are planing to go, and they don’t have to wait an hour or more between them, they are more inclined to try it, and maybe keep using it. You don’t even need 30’+ buses, smaller vehicles are more than capable, and can serve your needs, without a massive capital investment.

However, cities as small as 30,000 people should be working on their own internal light-rail system of some sort. It may seem like a small number of people, it really isn’t and the right system can easily be self-supporting, once you get the infrastructure built.

Conclusion

Public/Mass Transportation will never solve all of a city or regions problems, but we as a people have screwed up continuously in the past, but have the chance to reverse these actions. It will never replace the car for all uses, but anything that encourages less vehicular use, will always be a positive, for people, your community, and the environment.

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New

iPhone 12

October 13, Apple unveiled the iPhone 12 lineup. The Mini, Standard, Pro, and Pro Max. I was honestly, given the conservative nature of Apple’s adoption of new technologies, that they added 5G service to all of the devices. I was equally surprised that given their liberal stances on employment policies, they spent a lot of the keynote with a union busting company like Verizon touting their useless mmWave 5G.

5G

5G is an interesting package of technologies, the most interesting of which, is unlikely to actually be useful to most people. 5G is still a wireless technology, which is susceptible to easy interference and wastes a lot of power. We haven’t even gotten close to saturating LTE/4G, and given the lower frequencies that 4G work on, it may continue to be more reliable for decades to come. Copper and Fiber connections are still the best for most applications, and will be for the foreseeable future.

MagSafe

I was quite surprise to see Apple resurrect the MagSafe brand for their update to the Qi system on their devices. One hopes that they would actually be smart and provide the specs to Qi, and see the entire industry adopt it as a standard not only for charging, but for the accessories as well. I have been using a magnetic mount for my iPhone since 2016, adding charging will be great, for those with Bluetooth CarPlay (or Android Auto) compatibility. I also love the idea of using MagSafe for the cases, which in theory means that they don’t have to be skin tight on the phones, and perhaps much easier to swap between.

Cameras

I not a huge camera person, but I can certainly understand that some of the camera upgrades are positive, and one, the telephoto lens on the Pro is, meh. LIDAR coupled with the new camera arrays on the Pro may bring some very interesting new abilities to the phone. The new low-light and night-mode options will certainly help to bring the iPhone back to being the best casual shooter.

Accessories

I can totally understand Apple’s desire to ditch the EarPods from the iPhone box. I seem to be the only person on the planet who loves them, mainly because they are the only headphones that actually work reliably in my ears. But most people I know, either have a Bluetooth headset they prefer, or other headphones/earbuds, that they seem to like better. I can also understand the desire to not include a power brick, since USB is basically everywhere… however they give you a USB-C to Lightning cable. Yes USB-C is the future, but very few people have it available, except on their Mac, provided they bought a new on in the last 5 years (I’m still rocking a 2011 iMac and a 2012 MacBook Pro Retina). I do love that Apple is basically encouraging people to buy USB-C bricks… I’m just waiting for everyone to complain that the crappy, 3rd-party USB-C brick either charges too slowly, gets too hot, or catches on fire, then they’ll blame Apple.

Conclusion

The iPhone 12 is honestly a minor upgrade for anyone with an iPhone X or newer, aside from the faster processor, or if you need a better camera. 5G is not the killer feature, yet, and not worth the upgrade. However, if you are in the market for a new phone, most people with be happiest with the iPhone 12 Mini or iPhone 12.