h a l f b a k e r y"Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Given a start location, generate map with
a
color shading showing all areas within 15
minutes driving time, 30 minutes, an
hour,
etc. Start location is necessary in order to
be able to mark out the regions.
(Depends
on having average speed data for all
streets.)
Alternatively,
a map where the streets are
color coded according to average speed
one can maintain. Use a spectrum from
red to green, for example, then you can
evaluate alternative routes based on the
combination of length and color. This
eliminates the start location bias.
Difficulties:
- Need to know how you are traveling.
Motorcycles will be faster than cars under
some circumstances.
- Certain locations are not reachable by
motorized vehicles.
- Speed can depend on departure time as
well as direction of travel.
- Speed is altered by weather conditions
and obstructions (construction work,
accidents, parades, drawbridges, idiots,
etc).
- Data collection is difficult. You need to
figure in stop lights, stop signs, traffic
calming devices (speed bumps, barriers),
railroad crossings, etc.
Time Travel Map
http://www.dvd.com/...&productnumber=6161 [DrCurry, Oct 04 2004]
[link]
|
|
You would be surprised what kind of maps your local police force has! |
|
|
this might be simpler than you make it out to be. in the u.s. at least all streets have posted legal speed limits. driving legally, this will turn out to be rather close to your average speed you can "maintain." simply color the map with different colors based on the speed limit. |
|
|
i think most mapping software takes this into account. as for the rest the data would need to be real time to account for accidents, weather, rush hour etc. your idea doesn't really address how this might be done. |
|
|
In the UK all streets have a designated speed limit too. In fact the statutory speed limit on a motorway is 70mph. BUT they restrict this in peak times on the London Orbital (M25) from 40 to 60 mph at peak times. It is very galling to be told that the speed limit is 60mph when you are in a queue doing 20mph! |
|
|
awwww, I thought this had something to do with time
travel, and the need for a map, anyway+ |
|
|
I'd argue that posted speed limits only
give you a first approximation.
Travelling ten blocks where you have to
stop for cross traffic versus travelling
ten blocks where you don't gives you
different speeds even if the posted
speed limits are identical. |
|
|
If only there were some way to synchronize all the traffic lights through a relationship. As long as you honored the speed limit, you'd never get stuck at an intersection. Of course you're still going to get broadsided by someone who isn't paying attention, but at least you'd feel you'd gotten somewhere. |
|
|
The Travel Time Map feature for driving a car could be added to just about any mapping program by running n number of sample queries given a starting location. Then color a map with the data. The computer time needed would grow exponentialy as the mapped area increased. |
|
|
All of the listed difficulties are just the same variables that existing mapping programs struggle at with some success. |
|
|
Time Bandits is not what I would call Gilliam's best work, assuming that his work can be called work. |
|
|
You don't think directing a movie is work? |
|
|
If you think it isn't, guess again. I've worked for one & played poker with two. Long, busy, *involved* headache-filled months without pause, not just *during* production, but (what I call [wIc]) pre-pre, pre-, post and [wIc] post-post. Can be unhealthy. |
|
|
If I am enjoying the thing which I am doing, I can hardly call it work. Sure, energy was expended, and time spent. But it wasn't laborious. I choose to believe that Terry Gilliam had a great time directing that movie, and that he enjoys what he does. |
|
| |