The Urban Country Bicycle Blog: Americans Work 2 Hours Each Day To Pay For Their Cars
Imagine you could work 500 hours less every year. That works out to be an extra 12.5 weeks of vacation. Alternatively, imagine you got paid for an extra 500 hours of work each year, without having to work those extra 500 hours. 

via courtenaybird:

The Urban Country Bicycle Blog: Americans Work 2 Hours Each Day To Pay For Their Cars

Imagine you could work 500 hours less every year. That works out to be an extra 12.5 weeks of vacation. Alternatively, imagine you got paid for an extra 500 hours of work each year, without having to work those extra 500 hours. 

via courtenaybird:

(via courtenaybird)

Book  Review - ‘Green Metropolis - Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and  Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability,’ by David Owen - Review -  NYTimes.com
Owen, a staff writer for The New Yorker, makes a convincing case that Manhattan, Hong Kong and large, old European cities are inherently greener than less densely populated places because a higher percentage of their inhabitants walk, bike and use mass transit than drive; they share infrastructure and civic services more efficiently; they live in smaller spaces and use less energy to heat their homes (because those homes tend to share walls); and they’re less likely to accumulate a lot of large, energy-sucking appliances. People in cities use about half as much electricity as people who don’t, Owen reports, and the average New Yorker generates fewer greenhouse gases annually than “residents of any other American city, and less than 30 percent of the national average.” 

Book Review - ‘Green Metropolis - Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability,’ by David Owen - Review - NYTimes.com

Owen, a staff writer for The New Yorker, makes a convincing case that Manhattan, Hong Kong and large, old European cities are inherently greener than less densely populated places because a higher percentage of their inhabitants walk, bike and use mass transit than drive; they share infrastructure and civic services more efficiently; they live in smaller spaces and use less energy to heat their homes (because those homes tend to share walls); and they’re less likely to accumulate a lot of large, energy-sucking appliances. People in cities use about half as much electricity as people who don’t, Owen reports, and the average New Yorker generates fewer greenhouse gases annually than “residents of any other American city, and less than 30 percent of the national average.” 

smarterplanet:

Analytics Minutes: With James Taylor

James Taylor, author of Smart (Enough) Systems and an expert on the analytics frontier of business decision management, shares a brief story on the growing role that deep data and business optimization can play in something as familiar and urban as package delivery services. You can follow him on Twitter @jamet123

Analytics Minutes is a new video series that is part of the IBM New Intelligence Video Studio.  You can find more analytics-oriented content and clips there, as well on the New Intelligence channel of posts on Smater Planet | Tumblr.