- Where the World's Unsold Cars Go To Die. Amazing pictures.
- The 10 Algorithms That Dominate Our World
- Statistically speaking, Brazil is the favorite to win the World Cup 2014. Seriously.
- What job will you get with that degree?
- How the partial ban on cars in Paris reduced air pollution. Tianjin is doing the same.
- A special issue dedicated to inequality in Science Maganize (ht Raquel Guimarães)
- How much square-footage $1million can buy in world's most expensive cities
- Bicycle sharing systems - Global Trends in Size
- Cycling around the world
Structured Procrastination on Cities, Transport Policy, Spatial Analysis, Demography, R
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Assorted links
Marcadores:
Assorted links,
Cycling,
Education,
environment,
Inequality,
Video
Monday, May 26, 2014
Serious Logistic Problems
For those interested in urban logistics, I imagine you already take this kind of problem seriously. I haven't found, however, any paper estimating the impact of loose wild turkeys on delivery delays in urban areas. This study would be a strong candidate for the Ig Nobel Prize.
Friday, May 23, 2014
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Monday, May 19, 2014
Countdown to Brazil's World Cup
The World Cup is receiving wide coverage from the international press. Fortunately, football is not the center of the discussions.
Here is Simon Jenkins's article for The Guardian and a critical take on it by Chris Gaffney.
Related Link:
Marcadores:
Events,
Rio de Janeiro,
Urban Picture
Friday, May 16, 2014
Assorted Links
- Large cities are less green (via Araz Taeihagh). Disputable, but very interesting.
- Apparently, the entire human population could fit inside the Grand Canyon (via Alberto Jakob)
- Great video: 'Where time comes from'
- The Strange, Post-Soviet Architecture of Astana, Kazakhstan
- Looking at evictions in San Francisco since 1997. It would be great to have a similiar map showing the WorldCup evictions in Rio
- The scaling of human interactions with city size (via Annalee Newitz)
- The Easter Rocket War of Vrontados
- Fruits and Vegetables Under an MRI Scanner (via Rob Simons)
- Amazing project using Drones, Community Mapping and 3D printers to remap Lima (via Flora Roumpani)
Marcadores:
Assorted links,
cartography,
environment,
GIS,
Modern Architecture,
World Population
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Research Vacancies, LSE and Oxford - Urbanization in Developing Economies
Henry Overman points out to some Research Vacancies on Urbanization in Developing Economies in a joint programme between Serc/LSE and Oxford University.
A major joint research programme on urbanisation in developing economies, with particular reference to Africa, has been launched at LSE's Spatial Economics Research Centre and Oxford's Department of Economics, with support from the World Bank. Profs.Vernon Henderson (LSE) Paul Collier and Tony Venables (Oxford) are recruiting a Research Manager, Research Economists and Assistants and GIS Data Specialists to work on the programme. The programme offers outstanding opportunities to contribute to cutting edge research in the field, based in two of Europe's leading social science research and training institutions.
Marcadores:
Africa,
Development,
Economics,
Heads up,
Urbanization
Sunday, May 11, 2014
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Spatial data analysis in R: where to start
- A good introduction to visualising spatial data in R, by R Lovelace and J Cheshire
- How to Map Geographic Paths in R
- Spatial microsimulation with R
- How to Make Smoothed Density Maps in R
- Circular Migration Plots – Do it yourself
- All about Spatial data analysis in R, by R Bivand via Adam Dennett
- Data visualisation programming: a recap
- Carlos Cinelli also reminds us about the The R User Conference 2014. There will be a tutorial with Virgilio Gómez-Rubio, one of the authors of Applied Spatial Data Analysis with R
- Introduction to Spatial Data and ggplot2
[image credit: J Cheshire]
Marcadores:
cartography,
GIS,
R,
visualizing complexity
Monday, May 5, 2014
Assorted links
- Contribute to a survey on the connection between the built environment and personal health: It took me 3 minutes to answer this short questionnaire. The survey is organized by our loyal reader Benjamin Littenberg.
- Why do birth rates peak at different times in different places?
- Longer commutes in Britain (via Peter Gordon)
- An ageing economy will be a slower and more unequal one
- Great piece by Simon Jenkins on the coming Mega Events in Rio
- Space Syntax of street connections in the Greater South East of England
- Gary S. Becker has passed away. Many interesting links about his work at MR
- The Pollution Burden in California by census tracts (via Stephen Miller)
[image credit: LA Times]
Marcadores:
Assorted links,
commuting,
environment,
Fertility,
Rio de Janeiro,
space syntax
Sunday, May 4, 2014
Friday, May 2, 2014
Urban Density Patterns in 9 Global Cities
Here is a nice 'chart' comparing population density patterns across nine global cites. The chart is part of a broader analysis by the LSE Cities programme and their not so new project Urban Age.
[Click on the image to enlarge it]
Related Links:
[Click on the image to enlarge it]
[image credit: LSE Cities]
Related Links:
Marcadores:
Density,
Morphology,
Polycentricity
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