stolen goods and the power of the internet

Like the good folks over at the Independent, I too have recently been reading Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody, a collection of arguments and vignettes on the power of the Internet. The salient point that the Indy picked up on is how, by abolishing the high costs of printing, publishing, and distributing information, the Internet is forcing The Newspaper to reassess its traditional role as the weekly standard for a community.

A few weeks ago, I ran into Lenore Ramm of Eclectic Glob of Tangential Verbosity at the DPAC Blogger Bash. She told me of a friend who’s bike had been stolen and how, in an effort to retrieve the bike, the friend created a website. While stories of using blogs and monitoring eBay and Craigslist to recover stolen goods have become almost commonplace, take a second to think about what this means for just how pervasive the Internet has become to our conception of community.

Just two examples to focus my point:

  • Neighborhood listservs are now among the most reliable sources of hyperlocal news. Warnings about loose dogs on the streets, plants to give away, yard sales announced, café music benefit show funds raised, even homes sold — no topic is off-topic as long as it happens in the neighborhood. When friends ask about finding housing in my neighborhood, I refer them to the listserv and encourage them to join.
  • There are also a growing number of cities with local blogs that cover on-the-ground civic reporting with as much reliability and insight as the municipal papers. Bull City Rising and Church Hill People’s News (Richmond, VA) come to mind.

And while there have always been start-up attempts at taking a cut from the local publishing market, Shirky’s point is that never has it been so easy to obtain the means of publication. Until the advent of the Internet, publishing an independent organ for the sole purpose of recovering a $700 bicycle just would not have been possible.

So, on March 21st, a bike was stolen in Old West Durham, and now the whole world can know about it. Any computer attached to the Internet can browse to http://findmybicycle.blogspot.com/, learn how to spot the features that make the victim’s bike unique, and get in touch with the owner. “I’m hoping that we demonstrate the power of social media!,” says the website’s creator.

So world, although it may add some perverse pleasure to your life to know that bike thieves spend eternity in a special circle of hell for their miscreant deeds, the owner of a silver Trek 7500 FX will find more pleasure if she gets her bike back. Even more still if a community helps her find it.

 

Trips for Kids benefit art show, Cinco de Mayo

The cycling community has a reputation for creativity — the annual Bike Art exhibits (I, II, III, IV), the Bicycle Film Festival, and the alt-bike phenomenon each attest to the restlessness that two-wheeled travelers often feel. By restlessness I mean an inability to accept the world as ordinary. Perhaps nowhere is that restlessness evident than in North Carolina, where a bicycle mechanic on the Outer Banks once said to his brother, “what else can we make with these tools?”

Danielle Riley, a Durham school teacher and editor, is sharing her art with the cycling community for the month of May. Andrea Hundredmark, Durham Public Schools teacher and Director of the Triangle chapter of Trips For Kids, says…

Danielle Riley is showing her photography for the first time EVER at The Broad Street Cafe.  Her work will be up for the month of May.  The kickoff for the show is Tuesday, May 5th at 7 pm.  There will be a wine tasting as well.

Please check out the link [sic] to learn a little about Broad Street Café, their menu and Danielle.  There is a short artist bio and some samples of some her photos on the site.

20%  of any proceeds from the sale of her work will be donated to Triangle Trips for Kids – a non-profit organization that takes children living in at-risk situations on bike rides, teaches them about cycling and how to build bikes.

To learn more about Trips for Kids, check out their website or this article written for the Herald Sun last year. The Broad St Café is located here.

 

Library of Congress, on Flickr


Search within any Flickr user’s account, then click the Slideshow icon/link in the top right to create your own. Grab the embed codes from the Share link (once you’re looking at your slideshow).

 

free valet bike parking at Durham Earth Day

If you bike to Durham’s 2009 Earth Day celebration this weekend, BPAC promises to treat you kindly. Says member Steve Saltzman…

For those of you coming to Earth Day this Saturday, please ride your bicycles.

Durham’s Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission is offering a free bike valet service so you won’t have to carry a lock or worry about your bike being stolen. To the best of my knowledge, it is the first time this service has been offered in the Triangle.

Maybe not as kindly as Dave Wofford offers to treat cyclists dropping in the Bull City Arts Collaborative on a Third Friday, but hey, we cyclists are happy to turn the tables on our city’s proclivity to subsidize the automobile with free parking, even if only for a day.

I wonder if we know the real cost of providing this free valet service…

PARTICIPANTS CAN BIKE TO EARTH DAY THIS YEAR

Give your car the day off and use the bike valet service

Durham, NC:  Getting to Durham’s Earth Day Festival just got easier! Participants can give their car the day off by taking advantage of the bike valet service that will be offered by Durham’s Bicycle & Pedestrian Advisory Commission (DBPAC). The Earth Day Festival will be held on Saturday, April 25 at the CCB Plaza (201 Corcoran Street) and Historic Parrish Street from 12 noon – 5 p.m.

One of the many components of the festival this year is active and green transportation. Participants who wish to pedal to and from the festival can secure their bike at the SunTrust building at the intersection of Main and Corcoran.

Bikers who use the American Tobacco Trail can ride up to the trailhead at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park, and continue a few blocks north into downtown. Streets will be closed to cars. The bike valet service is free and is a great way to travel to Earth Day. All bikes will be kept secure and must be claimed by 5 p.m.

For more information contact Ken Kaye of the Durham Bicycle & Pedestrian Advisory Commission at (919) 483-0749 (kkaye@nc.rr.com) or Cynthia Booth at (919) 560-4355 (cynthia.booth@durhamnc.gov). To learn about additional Earth Day activities, visit www.durhamearthday.org.

About Durham Parks and Recreation

Durham Parks and Recreation provides opportunities for the Durham community to “Play More.” The department strives to help citizens discover, explore and enjoy life through creative and challenging recreational choices that contribute to their physical, emotional and social health. For more information call (919) 560-4355.

About Durham’s Bicycle & Pedestrian Advisory Commission

Durham’s Bicycle & Pedestrian Advisory Commission was designed to develop ways to make walking and biking around Durham safe and easy. Visit www.bikewalkdurham.org to learn more.

 

new bike lanes now on Durham Bike Map

Approximately 6 miles of new bike lanes have been added to Durham streets since the 2006 Bicycle Plan was completed by Greenways, Inc. I’ve added those bike lanes to the Durham Bike Map.

New bike lanes are on…

  • Chapel Hill Road from Pickett Road to Anderson Street (0.4 miles)
  • Downing Creek Parkway from NC 54 to Barbee Chapel Rd (0.9 miles)
  • Elizabeth St from Main St. to Carlton St. (0.4 miles)
  • Erwin Road from Anderson St. to Pettigrew St. (0.5 miles)
  • Leon St from Duke to Haverford (0.6 miles)
  • Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. from Hope Valley Rd. to University Dr (1.6 miles)
  • Nichols Farm Road from Holloway Street to Holder Road (1.2 miles)
  • Sedwick Rd from Dedmon Ct. to Verna St. (0.5 miles)
  • Lawson Street from Bacon St. to Briggs Ave. (0.5 miles)

Which brings the total length of striped bike lanes in Durham to approximately 20.4 miles. Thanks to Dale McKeel for the update.


View Larger Map

 

Bull Moon Ride: Saturday, July 18th

Durham Habitat for Humanity’s night ride, scheduled for July 18.

Durham, NC – The Durham Bulls and Habitat for Humanity of Durham today released the tentative map for the 2009 Bull Moon Ride. The ride, mapped at just under 17 miles, will be a circuit through Downtown Durham and the American Tobacco Trail that will start and finish at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park.

“We wanted to have an extraordinary experience for people who don’t normally venture out on bikes at night, and to show off the city of Durham,” route committee member Dave Connelly explained, “We think it has a lot of character.”

Some of the landmarks cyclists will see include Duke University Chapel, the new Durham Transportation Center, Durham Performing Arts Center, American Tobacco Campus, Brightleaf Square, the Durham Athletic Park, the plaza at center city, the Carolina Theatre and the American Tobacco Trail. The route will also include a ride through Campus Drive, Ninth Street, Main Street and historic Parrish Street.

“We did a lot of fine tuning to the basic route to try to incorporate as many places as we could think of,” Connelly continued, “It’s not a race, we want it to be family friendly and we will have escorts from the sheriff’s office.”

Ride support will be provided by the Durham County Sherriff’s Office for cyclists’ safety and traffic control. The ride will include a pit stop at the plaza in center city sponsored by Durham Hendrick Auto Mall. They will be providing the support vehicles for riders, along with water and facilities at the pit stop.

“One of our core values is to support our community and Habitat for Humanity of Durham does a great job of supporting this community. As a local business we want to be a part of an event like this,” said Jack Morgan, service director for Durham Hendrick Auto Mall.

The Bull Moon Ride is a night time bicycle ride through Downtown Durham benefiting Habitat for Humanity of Durham. In 2008, over 200 cyclists participated in the inaugural event, raising thousands of dollars for Habitat of Durham. The 2009 event is scheduled for Saturday, July 18th at 8:30 PM at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park. Details regarding registration will be announced on Thursday, April 2nd on Durhambulls.com.

 

Bike/ped opportunities in the economic stimulus bill

Make sure Transportation Enhancement funding is in the final bill.

This week there will be a conference committee where several members of the House and several members of the Senate will work together to reconcile the two bills. Conferees need to hear that Transportation Enhancements are important to stimulating the economy, creating green jobs, and moving us towards a sustainable future.

Make three calls or send three emails today:

1. Senator Kay Hagan
(202) 224-6342 (Washington, DC office)
(919) 856-4630 (Raleigh office)
Senator_Hagan@hagan.senate.gov

2. Senator Richard Burr
(202) 224-3154 (Washington, DC office)
(800) 685-8916 (Winston-Salem office)
(252) 977-9522 (Rocky Mount office)
(828) 350-2437 (Asheville office)
(704) 833-0854 (Gastonia office)
(888) 848-1833 (Wilmington office)
Write to Senator Burr using this link: http://burr.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.ContactForm

3. Call your representative
Find your representative here – http://www.house.gov/house/MemberWWW_by_State.shtml#nc

…and ask each of them to tell the Conferees to support Transportation Enhancements in the Economic Recovery bill.

Tell them:

  • Bicycle and pedestrian projects create jobs at the same or better rate than highway projects.
  • These smaller projects can move quickly to hire local businesses and help local economies.
  • Providing safe and convenient bicycle and pedestrian access gives families healthier and cheaper transportation options.
  • Improving sidewalks and bike lanes can make a downtown a destination, further helping the local economy.
  • Better biking and walking options also help ensure greater energy independence, less pollution, and a healthier United States!

Please share this alert with all bicyclists (and pedestrians) you can, and encourage them to join you in supporting biking and walking today!

Adapted for from email action alerts published by MassBike and Durham for Obama.

 

Critical Mass, tomorrow




Just a reminder; Durham Critical Mass is tomorrow.

 

pedal junkie


Noticed months ago that my right pedal was loose; I probably should have taken care of it before today.

 
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the real cost of owning a car

Got an extra 8 to 12 thousand dollars lying around each year? You’d better make sure you do, if you want to own and drive a car.

Adrian Hands breaks down very nicely the average costs of owning different classes of cars.

Since owning and riding bikes is not free either, has anyone broken down the average annual cost of cycling?