Forsyth Residents Part of Study Linking Population Density and Walking

The American Journal of Preventive Medicine just published the results of a study that looked at the effect of land use density on peoples' walking behavior and included Forsyth County residents as part of the study.  It's really a "no duh" result, but having data to inform municipal planning decisions is always helpful.  From the study:

After adjustment for individual-level characteristics and neighborhood connectivity, it was found that higher density, greater land area devoted to retail uses, and self-reported proximity of destinations and ease of walking to places were each related to walking. In models including all land-use measures, population density was positively associated with walking to places and with walking for exercise for more than 90 minutes/week, both relative to no walking. Availability of retail was associated with walking to places relative to not walking, and having a more proportional mix of land uses was associated with walking for exercise for more than 90 minutes/week, while self-reported ease of access to places was related to higher levels of exercise walking, both relative to not walking.

Jon Just Planted His Field of Incredulousness on Farmville

One of my pet peeves about Facebook was getting all those stupid apparently profitable notices about what my friends were doing on Farmville or Mafia Wars.  Thankfully someone showed me how to hide those things, but I'm guessing my lack of participation hasn't hurt the games' parent company, which according to this article may be valued at $1 billion.  You read that right, billion with a "b."  From the article:

That could make San Francisco-based Zynga the third-largest U.S. video-game publisher by market capitalization, bigger than Take-Two Interactive Software Inc., the maker of crime-game franchise “Grand Theft Auto.” New York-based Take-Two had 2008 sales of $1.54 billion and has a market value of $909 million.

Zynga will have revenue of $210 million this year and $355 million next year, according to Justin Smith, founder of the industry-tracking Web site Inside Social Games. The figures are based on estimates of Zynga’s revenue per player across all its games and its number of daily active users, Smith said.

H/T to Ed Cone for the link.

21st Century Bell Ringers

Some Salvation Army kettles in Raleigh can take credit cards.  From the story:

The red kettles appearing outside Raleigh-area stores Thursday include four equipped with credit card readers to take electronic donations.

The News & Observer reported that The Salvation Army's Wake County chapter joins a handful across the country experimenting with plastic.

Public Service With a Grimace

I've written before about volunteering my time as a member of the Lewisville Zoning Board of a Adjustment for a few years, and now as a member of the Lewisville Planning Board.  Usually I really enjoy it and I definitely find it interesting.  Last night's work session, however, was interesting yet far from enjoyable.

Our work sessions and public meetings (we usually have one work session and one public meeting each month) usually last about two hours and unless you really get into town planning they're about as exciting as watching paint dry.  Occasionally we have some contentious issues pop up and you can imagine that if we recommend against granting someone's request they aren't too happy about it.  Last night we had a gentleman come in to attend our work session even though his case wasn't on our agenda because he hadn't filed the appropriate paperwork with the town.  Still we made a motion to add him to the administrative part of our agenda, which falls at the end of the meeting, and he waited for it to come up.

Cut to 2 1/2 hours later and the gentleman's case came up.  The town planner reported that he hadn't recieved the paperwork necessary to formally schedule the case for us and as a result he and his staff hadn't prepared a staff report or recommendation, so we agreed to continue the case to our next meeting.  The planner had also provided us with copies of the letter from the gentleman that had initiated the case and an attached list of new uses he would like to have applied to his downtown building.  In addition the town planner provided a copy of the letter his office had sent to the gentleman detailing what he needed to do to get his case on the agenda.  When the gentleman heard that his case wasn't going to be heard he wasn't pleased and he asked if he could speak. When told that it wasn't a public meeting so he'd need to get permission from the Board to speak and it became apparent that we weren't inclined to listen to him until we had all the case work in front of us, he proceeded to speak anyway.  I can't quote him directly, but I can say that he basically accused us of having preconceived notions about his case and he said that the whole process was rigged.  He ended by sarcastically thanking us for wasting two hours of his time.

I was fine until he accused us of wasting his time.  As I said, we normally meet twice a month, but for much of this year we were under a series of tight deadlines due to a moratorium the town had put on downtown development so for about six months we were meeting weekly.  We on the board are all busy people with jobs, families, family activities, church activities, etc. and yet we willingly give the town some of our precious time in exchange for the occasional "thank you" or "job well done."  It's truly the definition of public service and for someone to accuse us of wasting his time just pushed me over the edge.  The devil on my shoulder wanted to shoot him a one-fingered salute and tell him he could take his valuable time and shove it where the sun don't shine, but instead I bit my lip and let him go ahead and stomp out of the room like a five year old.  I'm confident that if his case does come before us we'll treat it with the same objectivity we always do, but he won't be getting service with a smile. 

More Dudes Needed

According to this post at Applied Rationality, which in turn links to an Inside Higher Ed article, it seems that small liberal arts colleges are struggling with their own bizarro world cases of gender equity:

The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has started an inquiry into the extent to which liberal arts colleges discriminate against female applicants in an attempt to minimize gender imbalances in the student body. On Friday, the commission agreed on a set of colleges — primarily in the Washington area — to investigate, but declined to release a full list.

The issue is an extremely sensitive one for liberal arts colleges, many of which in recent years have worried about their gender ratios reaching points (60 percent female is commonly cited) where they face difficulty in attracting both male and female applicants. Generally private undergraduate colleges have the legal right to consider gender in admissions. They were specifically exempted from the admissions provisions of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.

People, it's not complicated.  Want more dudes?  Simply do the following:

  • Install 60" flat screens in every dorm room.
  • Outfit all rooms with an Xbox and a free subscription to Live.
  • Also provide unlimited supplies of nachos and any fried food.
  • Remove any "English Literature" requirements from the curriculum. Yes, yes I know it's a "Liberal Arts" college, but what's so liberal about reading boring crap written by a bunch of whimpy navel gazers or, well, women. Sounds anything but liberal to me.
  • Introduce a course on Family Guy, and call it something cool sounding like, "Influence of Modern American Cartoons on Familial Discourse."

Do those things and you'll be swimmin' in dudes.  You might be wondering why I didn't mention free beer, but honestly today's generation of young dudes seem to be a bunch of pansies who drink froo-froo concoctions with all kinds of silly names.  Sadly, the beer would be wasted.

Triad Restaurant Week

Here's something I can definitely get into.  It's Triad Restaurant Week from November 13-22 and there are plenty of good restaurants participating in Winston-Salem, Greensboro and High Point.  The participating restaurants are providing specially priced three course meals.  Since I hit all three cities at some point in any given week this gives me a great excuse to eat out.  A lot.  Like I need an excuse.

Thanks to Sarah South for the link.

If You’re in a Drought You Should Call Me

If you live in an area that’s experiencing a drought you really should
consider hiring me to take a business trip to your area. I truly have
a gift for bringing wet weather with me. Today I’m bringing the
remnants of a hurricane with me to Atlanta. In November. In June I
brought a flash flood with me. To Vegas.

Put it this way: if I was an astronaut they’d find water if they sent
me to the moon or Mars.

Not Remotely Funny or Cool

Someone sent an envelope containing baby powder to Rep. Foxx's office in Clemmons and caused quite a scare for one of her staffers.  As someone who lived through the whole anthrax thing in DC (my company was served by the postal facility that had to be decontaminated about 8 years ago, which meant we got some crispy mail for a while and any time we had a "clumpy" envelope everyone got a little nervous) I can tell you that if this was intended as some kind of joke then it's not remotely funny.  For that matter, I don't care how much you dislike a Congress-critter, this is a reprehensible way to try and make your point.