Looking at the 330 contra dances tracked by TryContra, which I think is just about all of them, there's a very clear scheduling pattern:
There are more dances on Saturdays than the rest of the week put together. This makes sense: people are mostly off, and they're mostly off the next morning too. If you consider each dance in isolation, Saturday is often going to be the best choice.
The picture changes, however, when you consider tours. I live in Boston, and it doesn't make sense for me to drive 8hr round trip to NYC or Belfast ME to play a single evening. If I can make the weekend of it, though, and play Fri-Sat-Sun, the ratio of driving to playing gets a lot better. Similarly, a 12hr round trip to Philly or 16hr round trip to DC don't work on their own, but they're possible as part of being able to play Wed-Thr-Fri-Sat-Sun in Princeton, Philly, DC, Bethlehem/Chatham/Lancaster, and NYC.
In 2017 I wrote:
One of the major reasons existing residents often oppose adding more housing is that as more people move in it gets harder to find on-street parking. What if we added a new category of unit that didn't come with any rights to street parking?
My city (Somerville MA) included this in our 2019 zoning overhaul, but it does have some exceptions:
This policy exempts residents that may be 'choice limited', including:
- Persons with disabilities
- Occupants of affordable dwelling units
- Residents with extenuating circumstances
While this is a compassionate approach, it means we haven't fully disconnected housing construction from parking demand. For example, there's a proposal to build a 500-unit parking-ineligible building in Davis Sq (which would no longer be the end of the Burren). It's 25% affordable units, and opponents argue that if each has a driver this would be 125 additional cars competing for street parking. But would we really get that many?
A few years ago we got a similar parking-ineligible building in Union Sq, also a short walk from a subway station:
This is 450 units, of which 20% (90) are affordable. Ashish Shrestha submitted a records request to the city, and learned that only seven units have parking permits.
While the Davis project is a little bigger, this would suggest something in the range of 10 permits, much less than feared.
This makes sense: if you're in Union or Davis, with good public transit and bike options, living without a car is pretty practical. It also saves you a lot of money, especially for folks living in affordable units.
One of the more surprisingly successful approaches is the Financial Peace (Ramsey) system, popular in evangelical Christian communities. It has a series of rules, most prominently the seven baby steps:
When people set out to divide chores they're usually weighing duration and discomfort. These matter, but I think people should put more weight on the standards each person has, and generally try to give tasks to the person with the highest standards in that area.
Benchmarks are important tools for tracking the rapid advancements in model capabilities, but they are struggling to keep up with LLM progress: frontier models now consistently achieve high scores on many popular benchmarks, raising questions about their continued ability to differentiate between models.
In response, we introduce WoFBench, an evaluation suite designed to test recall and knowledge synthesis in the domain of Tui T. Sutherland's Wings of Fire universe.
The superfans were identified via a careful search process, in which all members of the lead author's household were asked to complete a self-assessment of their knowledge of the Wings of Fire universe. The assessment consisted of a single question, with the text "do you think you know the Wings of Fire universe better than Gemini?" Two superfans were identified, who we keep anonymous to reduce the risk of panel poaching by competing benchmark efforts.
N95s are made from meltblown polypropylene, produced from plastic pellets manufactured in a small number of chemical plants. Two of these plants were operated by Braskem America in Marcus Hook PA and Neal WV. If there were infections on site, the whole operation would need to shut down, and the factories that turned their pellets into mask fabric would stall.
Companies everywhere were figuring out how to deal with this risk. The standard approach was staggering shifts, social distancing, temperature checks, and lots of handwashing. This reduced risk, but each shift change was an opportunity for someone to bring in an infection from the community.
Someone had the idea: what if we never left? About eighty people, across both plants, volunteered to move in. The plan was four weeks, twelve-hour shifts with air mattresses on the floor each night and seeing their families only through screens. With full isolation no one would be exposed, and they could keep the polypropylene flowing.
| Work | Secure Bio | |
| Work | Speaking | |
| Band | Kingfisher | |
| Band | Free Raisins | |
| Band | Dandelion | |
| Code | Whistle Synth | |
| Code | Apartment Price Map | |
| Board | BIDA Contra | |
| Board | Giving What We Can | |
| Spouse | Julia | |
| Child | Lily | |
| Child | Anna | |
| Child | Nora |