After Saturday’s dust storms, Burning Man’s bad luck continued
After Saturday’s dust storms, Burning Man’s bad luck continued
Are there any books about the decline of public transit in the US?
It’s well-known that the US used to have a highly functional public transportation network that was dismantled for the car, but I’m really curious on the details of how that happened. Obviously there was National City Lines who dismantled streetcars and replaced them with buses, as well as interstate highway construction gutting cities, but I feel like there’s a lot more detail and nuance that’s missing. Does anyone know of any books or other reading material that goes into the details of the decline? I’m hoping for something in-depth, think comparisons of big events vs ridership numbers vs average public transit speed, public opinion, ideally a case study on some actual cities. When the streetcars were ripped out, did the buses still provide adequate service, or was there a large decrease in frequency/quality? Were there frequency cuts later on? What happened when the private bus company inevitably went bankrupt? Did people without cars protest as service was cut, or were they left behind as people and jobs moved to suburbs, where service didn’t exist to begin with? What did people in small towns without cars do?
Best program to open .RW2 images?
Hello! My sister sent me some images on the .RW2 format, does anyone know any programs I should use to easily open/covert them to jpeg? Using Linux Mint if that helps. I know this could easily be googled, but someday I’d like to imagine people tacking site:lemmy.world to their google searches instead of site:reddit.com
Cycling has a weight problem: a call for the industry to be more transparent about its weight limits
I like Google Chrome
It works with most websites, it syncs my bookmarks across computers, lets me reuse my existing Google account instead of needing to make a new one, and I really don’t care about my data going to Google because I already give up my data in exchange for free services (which feels like a win-win).