Awesome new traffic animations from Aaron Koblin and the Yahoo Design Innovation Team

I blogged about Aaron’s flight path animations a while back. In June this year, I met Aaron and some of the other guys from the Yahoo Design Innovation Team at WhereCamp, who were showing off their animations. One that I particularly liked pulled data from the Yahoo! traffic API and created a frantic visualisation of accidents accross the US.

Whilst thinking of some cool stuff to do with the eCourier.co.uk GPS API this afternoon, I emailed Aaron to see if they had released their traffic animation. And they had - just this afternoon.

So here it is:

I can haz justice - Suing your landlord for fun and profit. Part 1

In Septmber 2005 I moved into a flat at 50 Maple Street, London:

Regent 2000 Properties - find your dream home

I was about to start a Masters degree course at UCL, which is just accross the road. I was an undergraduate student in London between 2000 and 2003, but from 2003 to 2005 I had worked and lived in East Africa, Ireland and Leeds. In September 2005, I had just enough time and money to spare two days to find a flat in London.

Finding a flat in London, on a student budget is not easy. I had up to £500 per month to spend on accomodation and travel costs, which really doesn’t buy you that much. To make matters worse, September is probably the worst possible time to try to find a new flat in London, as the influx of students ramp up demand. On the second day of looking, I walked into the offices of Regent 2000 Properties Ltd, in Camden. I was greeted by the Director of Regent 2000 Properties, a Mr Fahmy Elgamal, who performed a fantastic peiec e of Estate craft / am dram, and told me that I was ‘just in time’ to let one of their ‘best properties’ - a two floor flat at 50 Maple Street.

Shabby but cheap

The flat at Maple Street was shabby and poorly maintained, but it was available, very close to the university and above all, it was cheap. When I say cheap, I mean that I was to pay around £100 per week for a 3.5m*2m room, in a 4 bedroom, one bathroom, one kitchen house. There was no living room, but you rarely find a place in London for £100 per week, including travel costs that has one.

So we singed the contract, transferred the £2000 odd deposit (one months rent between 4 people) and I got back onto the train to Leeds.

October 2005 - the leaking begins

Everything that follows, was submitted to the Central London County Court on the 22nd June 2007. I have changed to names of the people I lived with to protect their identities. I have not changed any other details. My full statement to the Court can be found here.

On the 16th October, the leaking began. Water leaked from the roof, down the kitchen wall for days at a time. I phoned, emailed and wrote to the Landlord repeatedly, and they eventually sent a workman around. This is an exceprt from a document I prepared for the Court:

After phoning Regent 2000 Properties, the letting agents who deal with the letting and maintenance of the property, several times they had not sent any representatives to inspect or repair the leak. On Thursday 20th October 2005, I sent an email to Regent 2000 Properties stating:



“With regards to the water that is dripping down the wall - it is now dripping at a rate of one pint per 2.5 hours. Again, I am not trying to irritate you or anger you by telling you this. I have a legal duty as a [t]ennant to inform the landlord of such matters immediately. I have a family background in building surveying and water like this can cause permanent structural damage.”



By Saturday 22nd October 2005, Regent 2000 claimed to have repaired the leaking roof. However, there was now a growth of fungus in the area circled in blue on the sketch floor plan. Over the next few weeks the entire west wall of the kitchen became more and more increasingly damp, a fowl smell developed in the kitchen and the fungus began to decompose, which attracted flies.



This is documented in an email from Nicholas Black to Regent 2000 Properties, sent on the 22nd November 2005:



“Due to the leaking water almost a month ago there are dead mushrooms rotting in our kitchen, above the only shelves we have to keep food on. As you have so far failed to take action about this, we have contacted Camden Council with our concerns.”

This was the course of things for the next 6 months. Water would leak through the ceiling, I would complain, I would be ignored. Eventually a workman would come - often after I had waiting at the flat for hours with no one turning up. When they arrived, the workmen usually couldn’t speak enough English for me to be able to explain the problem to them. They usually had no, or very few tools, and they never managed to stop the water from leaking from the ceiling.

A wet start to the New Year

After a wet January, the kitchen ceiling collapsed on the 8th February 2006, showering an assortment of rotten plaster, wood, insulation, fungus and water all over the kitchen. We were unable to cook or even to access the kitchen for several days. When workmen eventually turned up, some days later, they simply nailed new plasterboard onto the still-damp joists. A new water stain appeared on the ceiling within hours of the workers leaving.

Bear in mind that whilst all of this is going on, I am trying to study for a Masters Degree in Geographic Information Science - I am studying for 12+ hours a day and battling with my land lord at the same time.

Here is another excerpt from the document I prepared for the Court:

My concerns about the inadequacies of the repair to the kitchen were confirmed on the 25th February 2006, when water leaking into the kitchen caused a light bulb to burn out. The incident is documented in the following email, sent by Nicholas Black to Regent 2000 Properties on the 26th February 2006:



“Last night leaking water caused the light bulb in the kitchen to burn out, leaving exposed live electric wires. This is an extremely dangerous situation as there is the potential for water to leak over exposed live electric cables. We can also not use the kitchen when it is dark as there is no light. Please send a qualified electrician to fix the problem and to determine the exact cause. “

Reading over the emails I sent and the document I prepared for the Court, its really hard to believe that this ever happened, but it did. By the end of February, water had been leaking down the kitchen wall for 4 months. The ceiling had collapsed once, mushrooms had grown, died, rotten and began to grow again. Now there was a live electric cable sticking out of the ceiling, with water dripping over it. Think it can’t get any worse, wait until the next installment.

Comming up next…

  • Health inspectors are called
  • My bedroom ceilling collapses
  • I file my case with the Court

Public Domain List of Tube stations

OpenStreetMap volunteers have just finished a Public Domain list of London Tube stations.

The list has been gathered by people using GPS units - so it is not a derivative of other OSM data. This means that it can be released under a Public Domain license, so you can do what you want with it.

I’ve knocked up a quick CSV of the data that you can grab from here

A new ebay scam

So right now I am selling loads of stuff on ebay, that I won’t bore you with the details of. One of the items is a 60GB ipod, which I had an offer for via email. The potential buyer wanted me to give them £250 for the ipod. They were happy to accept Paypal, but they didn’t want to buy the item using Buy it Now. This must be enough to set alarm bells ringing. Why would someone want to take a payment through Paypal and pay Paypal fees, but not want the additional protection of buying though an official Ebay channel. Come to think of it, why would you want to buy a two year old ipod for £250? This is what ‘Paypal’ have to say:

This message is originated from paypal company.We have received an order from our client “(Eric Smith)”eric.smith001@yahoo.com regarding the payment made to your paypal account.
The payment has been successfully made but due to security reason we have to receive the shipment tracking number before the next 24 hours for the processing of your order.
This a new measure we are taking to protect both our sellers and buyers against fraudulent customers.
Once you have shipped the item send us the shipment tracking number for verification after the number has verify your account will be credited instantly.

Please. Just ask yourself a few basic questions.

Thankfully, I am not an idiot. Whether its idiocy or pure greed or a mixture of both that lures people into these kind of scams, I don’t know. Its probably a mixture of both. Is it the case that people simply fail to apply every day reasoning when confronted with a computer? The message box asks you ‘Is your printer plugged into LPT1′. You don’t know what LPT1 is, but then who cares. If you were confronted with the question ‘Is your car parked in a schmler?’, you could reasonably answer, ‘No. My car is in a car park. What is a schmler?’.

But a quick buck is different - it seems to bypass any form of reason - and this applies as much within computing as it does within every other aspect of life. ‘I want what Dave has, so I’m going to get a credit card with 40% APR to buy it. When I default, its everyone else’s fault, because they didn’t stop this from happening to me’.

Suddenly, an individuals inability to grasp the concept of compound, damn, even simple interest rates is a reflection on a decaying society - the ‘fault’ of the credit providers who back up entire economies, or the magical internet that eats children for breakfast and steals you money via Paypal.

So fuck the morons who fall for this. If people want to give their money to eric.smith001@yahoo.com who will buy your piece of shit ipod for £250, or Eric Smith the guy in the pub who has a load of Rolex’s that fell off the back of the lorry, or Eric Smith the mortgage lender who will let you buy the house and give you 110% of its value, then let them. Its the thoughtless, fuckwitted greed of people who buy into these scams who cause the problems. Kill the demand and the supply will disappear.

Isle Of Man Mapping - OSM is on the way

On the 1st and 2nd September, the Isle of Man is going to be hosting its first OpenStreetMap mapping party, organised by Dan Karran, who’s been blogging quite a bit about the event. Dan’s latest post highlights the impact that OpenStreetMap maps of the Isle of Man can have. Right now, the best map of the Isle Of Man that you can find on the internet is OpenStreetMap’s. Its not complete yet, but it could be with a couple of days of effort.

You can find more details about the weekend on the OpenStreetMap wiki. If you are interested in joining in the mapping, get in touch with Dan, or me.

Coming up in the next few weeks

There’s a shed load of awesome events coming up in the next few weeks.

This Saturday 11th August is the OpenSreetMap Third anniversary party, which is happening at 3pm at The Anchor pub, near London Bridge station. Click here for a map.

Next up, the 3rd - 6th September sees the 43d annual Society of Cartographers Summer School, which is being held in Portsmouth, UK. The summer school has a programme packed full of all things cartographic, with OSM represented by Artem and me, who are talking on Thursday 6th in the ‘Community Mapping’ session.

Also on the horizon are the Isle of Man Mapping Party - OSM’s first mapping party on the island on the 1st September, and then FOSS4G and the Victoria Mapping Party - more to come on both the Isle of Man and Victoria mapping parties in the next few days.

A new modem, a new car and a new way of blogging

An exciting day it truly is. I have just taken deliver of a T-Mobile Web and Walk USB 3G badass modem, which theoretically should mean near constant Internet connectivity. The whole experience of getting the modem has been relatively painless - I ordered it last Wednesday and it was delivered the next Saturday. Between Wednesday and Saturday I had prove my identity to T-Mobile - presumably the Electoral Register isn’t good enough. The unit itself is a sleek white Huwaei USB modem. Installation on and Intel Mac was easy enough and I was up and runing in around 5 minutes. For £29 per month you get unlimited (subject to reasonable use of 5GB, so not unlimited at all) internet usage but no VOIP/Skype. They don’t seem to block you from using Skype, but as you are ‘allowed’ to use Skype with teh £39 per month package, my guess is that they will up your subscription if they catch you using it.

Another breakthough has been signing up for Streetcar. I recently sold my car to some sucker and I am now carless. Streetcar is a car rental service thats been around for a coupe of years, but recently seem to have been on an advetising spree. The idea is that you register with them online, and then book cars on an hourly basis. Their VW Golfs are distributed around London, parked on the street. You turn up, enter a PIN and drive off - all for pretty reasonable rates.

The catch is that because my driving license is from the Isle of Man, I have to send in the usual torrent of proofs of identity. Someone at Streetcar has done their homework and figured out that finding a fax machin/photocopier is one step too far for the bussy or the lazy. To compensate for this, they offer you 5 hours free rental if you send in your documents within 7 days. Clever. Whats more, within 2 hours of signing up, I had a welcome call (to my mobile, a real person).

To whoever has invested in Streetcar - your money is being well spent.

Finally, check out the Wordpress Dashboard Widget from Panaris Web Development which lets you post to your wordpress blog from your dashboard. There are a few character encoding issues, but hopefully they’ll be sorted out before too lobg.