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Posts
124
Comments
110
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • North American driving culture sucks. For the past 70 years cars have dominated at the expense of all other modes of travel. They’re deeply embedded into our culture, infrastructure, planning processes, transportation engineering, and daily lives. They have become synonymous with freedom of movement for a lot of people who can’t imagine any different way to get around. Speed limits and enforcement in their minds are seen as an infringement on their rights. It will be a long and uncertain process to enact change, ripe for disruption and setbacks, but the status quo isn’t working, we’ve hit the limits of cars’ ability to scale, and with the internet showing how things are in the rest of the world, some people are waking up to what’s possible when you aren’t dependent on cars to get around safely and reliably.

  • Canada too. Sometimes it seems like the speed “limit” is actually the minimum most people are expected to go (if possible) on Ontario’s highways, especially the busiest ones. Enforcement is almost entirely done manually and barely exists, if it’s being done at all.

    A lot of roads and highways are very over-engineered here with wide & forgiving lanes, with broad shoulders at the side. The actual speeds that can be accommodated in the design are far greater than the posted limit.

  • Hard not to bitch when, as a citizen of another country, I could never vote, and yet people here still have to deal with the consequences.

    You better believe the rest of the world will be bitching.

  • My experience with it has been mostly positive, however the laptop I’m running it on is aging and now doesn’t have support for hardware accelerated video decoding for some of the newer codecs. Watching some streams and videos has been a painful experience. Not sure if there’s a way around that.

  • we definitely want the fourth column to remain independent from government funding

    https://www.niemanlab.org/2022/01/do-countries-with-better-funded-public-media-also-have-healthier-democracies-of-course-they-do/

    “among rich countries, the United States is a biiiiiiiiig outlier [in per capita spending on public broadcasters]”

    “Germany spends $142.42 per person on its public media. Norway spends $110.73, Finland $101.29, Denmark $93.16. Leave Scandinavia for Western Europe and you see the U.K. at $81.30, France at $75.89, and Spain at $58.25. Heading a bit east? The Czech Republic’s at $60.08, Estonia $55.70, and Lithuania $32.71.

    Only trust the Anglosphere? Try Australia $35.78, New Zealand $26.86, or Canada $26.51. How about Asia? Japan spends $53.15, South Korea $14.93. Africa? Botswana’s at $18.38, Cabo Verde $15.22. 

    And then there’s the United States — which spends $3.16, per person, per year, on public broadcasting.”

    Fund PBS and NPR.

  • It would not surprise me if game developers use those screens to gain more time to load assets and initialize things in the background.

    I’ll bet they do that with cutscenes and elevators too whenever you’re about to go into a new zone.

  • somebody should be modelling and providing detailed pricing analysis.

    This sounds like what MPAC should be doing in Ontario. The last assessment was done in 2016. Ever since Doug Ford’s PCs got elected, the Tories have been delaying them for years, even before the pandemic was a convenient excuse, and now they’ve delayed indefinitely. They also closed all of the field offices. Even when MPAC did do assessments, they didn’t track market prices well because they only did them every 4 years. For comparison, Denmark calculates these values every 2 years.

    Another organization in this space in Ontario and Manitoba to be aware of is Teranet. They’re a private, for-profit company that has exclusive contracts with the Ontario and Manitoba governments. Seems shady to me that Ontario and Manitoba have allowed one company to monopolize and hoard our land registry data. In contrast, in BC, a crown corporation manages land registries data.

  • It always surprises me that when making the biggest purchase of their life people put so much trust and blind faith into realtors who aren’t required to have any formal education nor required to have any credentials to do the job.

    Maybe they should be required to get a degree that covers topics like geography, land use planning, architecture, and trades related to home construction.

  • Too many Ontarians are willfully ignorant, and are easily swayed by simple answers (and wrong) to complex problems that don’t involve any behavioural changes. Apparently we have one of the most highly educated populations in the world, yet we don’t vote like it.

  • Hmmmm

    Jump
  • I wouldn’t assume malice in all cases. Maybe they just aren’t great at breaking down complex subjects into plain language because it’s complex. Being an effective communicator and teacher is a skill that needs a lot of patience, practice, development, and feedback in order to get good, especially when trying to convey ideas through speech.

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Petits rappels sur ce mal-aimé prix du carbone

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    The carbon tax has its critics — do any of them have better ideas?

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    A Financial Crisis May Jeopardize Local News in Most of Atlantic Canada

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Easy Money: Here’s how to get started on your taxes

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    The disappearance of winter reveals how much we’ve come to love it

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    'Plan in advance': Eclipse glasses are hot sellers ahead of rare celestial event

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Les ventes des grossistes canadiens ont augmenté de 0,1 % en janvier

    World News @lemmy.ml

    Teen Pregnancy Linked to Premature Death, Study Finds

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Cenotaph Honouring SS Veterans Won’t Return To Oakville Cemetery: Source

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Canada’s equal funding to help Israeli and Palestinian victims of sexual violence draws Israeli fire.

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Access to legal services for Indigenous Peoples vital says ALST

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Canada's carbon rebate is increasing. Here’s how much Ontarians can expect in their bank accounts

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    For the first time in decades, Alberta's electricity grid has gone without coal power

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Canada evacuates some embassy staff in Haiti as violence engulfs capital

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Homicide team investigating suspicious death near University of British Columbia

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Liberals and New Democrats reach a deal on pharmacare

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    How Canada's study permit cap will change where international students are coming from

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Worried about a cyberattack? Here are tips to help protect your digital assets

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Senators receive panic buttons in response to rising concerns about security on Parliament Hill

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    $350B in pandemic savings was supposed to give the economy a huge boost. It still hasn't happened