bkdelong: (Default)
Hi all -

I have 2 1 additional ticket to Saturday, Sept. 26th's Jonathan Coulton and Paul & Storm concert at The Paradise.

Doors Open at 8.
Concert starts at 9.
18+
General Admission

I'll sell it for what I bought it for - $33 and can email the PDFs to you to print out.

First comment, first reserve. Paypal preferred.

ETA: All tickets sold.
bkdelong: (Default)

Very strange evening last night. I managed to leave my office the perfect time to amble to the Subway and arrive at North Station with enough time to hang out and listen to Neil Gaiman's "Stardust" which I had originally borrowed from the library but soon realized the "movie in my head" power-imagination I had would best be triggered if someone were reading it and I could close my eyes on the Commuter Rail Train home. I wanted to "read" it before the movie came out.

So there I was at North Station, listening to Neil when out of the corner of my eye I see a flash of something big falling off the platform onto the rail. When my "power imagination" gets going, I often have to wait a few beats because who the hell knows if I see what I think I see.

I wait a few minutes and look around. Despite hundreds of people staring at the platforms and schedule no one reacts. Maybe I'm seeing things. So I go over to the Platform 5/6 door and look out the window. Definitely looks like a body. I walk out onto the platform and carefully crane over the side to see better- yup. Pretty sure at this point.

No one's moved. I see what looks like an engineer on the next platform over and go out to meet him. I thought about yelling but thought I'd feel stupid - too nervous to go down onto the track myself. Luckily, the guy thought he saw someone too and was getting out of the engine to check. So he goes over and repeats the "viewing" steps I do and runs off.

Still no activity. Finally, a female Transit Police officer comes onto the platform looking concerned. I point out to where I can see the body and she starts running. Another male officer joins her walking a bit more slowly and looking irritated. The radios must have gone off because engineers, conductors and linesmen (?) start converging on the area or getting out of their trains to peer over at the scene.

The 5:55 train is announced on the same platform, opposite side. I walk out to the officers and yell down asking if they want a statement since I seemed to have been the only one who noticed. The male officer looked at me not really believing I saw it and said "No, he's going to be fine". The victim appeared to be walking with the assistance of the two officers.

I got on my train and turned Neil back on.

It was the strangest thing. When I played the moment back in my mind, I saw what looked like something cartwheeling over the side of the platform and dropping dead-weight. The problem is he wasn't lying out in the middle of the tracks. I don't know if he was peering over the side but he ended up under the 2ft overhang against the wall of the platform and not obvious to the eye.

Part of me wonders where he came from - I just don't remember seeing him out there. Did he fall off the awning for the platform? Did he fall from even higher, slide off the awning and flip over under the overhang? I just don't know.

I also wondered if I should have moved faster. Should the Red Cross part of me have raised the alarm? Should I have gone down there and assessed my ABCs like the First Aider/CPR trained part of me should have. I figured the MBTA would be out there in force in seconds. But I guess it is true that they have no cameras out there. How much did they just friggen spend redoing North Station?

Part of me looks at the possible security breaches at North Station and cringes. When the 7:29am Salem train arrives in Boston about 8am there are 2-3 other trains that arrive at the same time. About half of the people go right and half go left out the back to the Green Line and it BOTTLENECKS. Huge amounts of people moving very slowly - moreso since there's huge scaffolding erected outside the side of the building.

Did anyone else hear about this, see the gathering after police were alerted or see what happened after the 5:55pm train left?

bkdelong: (Default)

Well, I emailed Dennis Crowley from dodgeball.google my idea for using mobile phones for social applications while stuck on various forms of mass transit. No response, but I'm sure he's a busy bee.

I've been thinking further about it, even expanding it pretty largely. I see a few applications:

  1. Live Transit Data - since I've been riding the MBTA Commuter Rail on a regular basis, I've noticed the train is predictibly late; especially the 7:29am Newburyport/Rockport line into North Station. So why not create a service that allows various commuters to text/SMS/IM/email in, (or use a mobile web-based inteface), when they arrive at a station and when they leave a station?

    Several things could be done with that data. Update a Google Map live with a train's location. At the "estimated" live location point, have a small icon with the train's number, (in the case of the Inbound 7:29am train from Salem, 108) and show a train with timed waypoints.

    I gave it a shot with my horrible, second-hand, beaten-up Verizon Wireless LG phone and sent myself emails everytime we arrived at a stop. My thumb was sore from lack of experience and it would have helped more if I was able to send something both when we arrived & left but it was a small experiment proving that this is a feasible idea.

    Keep a history of all these times for referring back to and even mark them up with XML so one can reference a particular date, time, and period between stations. Also, include a means of reporting accidents such as the one in Franklin this week or other such delays with various categories. Users could also leave messages forum-style on a particular trip in commenting on the train's lateness, demeanor of the conductors, report incidents and request witnesses, post a lost or found....etc

    In addition to the "contribute" side, also allow users to sign up their phone or an email address at which to be notified for a particular train, line etc. Create a series of quick SMS codes allowing ad hoc queries as well as a profile on the Web site at which to set defaults.

    This solves a myriad of issues including "where the hell is the train" instead of waiting 15-20 minutes after an incident for it to show up on the MBTA marquee. It also could be used similar to plane tracking to allow spouses, significant others, and friends to know when to ACTUALLY leave for the station to pick you up.

    <sarcasm>And oooh - look! There's Google Transit on which data can be displayed and integrated!</sarcasm%gt;

  2. Social Networking - My train ride really isn't that long but it would be nice to be able to know who of my neighbors and friends along the entire Newburyport / Rockport line is taking the same train I am. Allow contributors and participants to state what train they are on, which car they are in and approx. which seat. Information can be set to "friends only" or based on some other trust relationship to allow for privacy.

    Determining train car numbers for such a short period of time may be difficult but I'd venture to guess that they don't change them at all during the day and if one can determine the pattern of which engine/car setup ends up with which train (i.e. my 7:29am 108 train). This would be helpful when arriving at North Station, (South Station etc). I see the 5:55pm/069 train on the board with no track number. However if I know the engine/car numbers for the day, I can simply look at the last car. This could be risky as sometimes the train master may arbitrarily choose trains based on their availability. I think the avid users of Railroad.netcould make a big contribution here.

    This degree of awareness could allow for localized IMing, ad hoc peer-to-peer laptop-based wireless networks and all sorts of experiments in mobile computing. I already see tons of people on their Blackberries, laptops and other devices working away. Why not enhance their value when commuting?

    I forsee a function of my Tivo being a "trusted friend" on my Commutning network so it will always know what train I am on and popup a window allowing any viewers to know when my train reaches the stop before Salem....or something.

As always, I fully admit my ideas are to the extreme of technology implementation and usage but while I strive to be an innovative fururist I am always seeking ways to maximize what little time I have. The more educated with contextualized data I am, the more in control I feel - much more conducive to getting things done.

Please - all comments welcome.

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