Posts Tagged ‘Somerville’

Google Trike may map Quincy Market

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Google is conducting a poll to decide which landmark should be next to be mapped by its Street View-recording tricycle. Other candidates include Stanford University, the Bronx Zoo and Alcatraz, among others.

What, no Fenway? No Castle Island? They may as well digitize the art installation that is City Hall Plaza while they’re at it, if they end up mapping Quincy Market across the street. Mapping things like the Somerville bike path also would add more walking routes around the Paris of the 90s, and just more Somerville, which the world clearly needs. It would also be pretty cool, if not particularly useful, if they strapped one of these things to an MBTA train, or just had someone drive the tricycle up and down the Orange Line.

After the jump, watch the innovative power of a company that made $1.6 billion in profit last quarter distilled into a guy riding a tricycle. (more…)

Boston chooses Bixi for bike sharing, BikeNow looks to Baltimore

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

The city of Boston has chosen the company that runs Montreal’s Bixi program to implement bike sharing in the Hub. It’s like Zipcar for bikes — bikes would be stationed at racks throughout the city, where a user would swipe a card to rent a bike, which they could return at a station near his or her destination. The AP reports: 

Boston officials are hoping to reach a decision with the Public Bike System Co. in the next 60 days to install a network of 2,500 bikes and 290 stations across the city by next summer, with the option of expanding to a 5,000-bike system encompassing the neighboring communities Brookline, Cambridge and Somerville.

It might be good news for bike-enthusiasts, but it’s a setback for BikeNow, a Boston University spinout which had been hoping to do the same thing. Amy Trus, a co-founder of the BU $50K Business Plan Competition finalist, said via email she knew BikeNow had a 50/50 chance at the contract.

BikeNow’s plan included a lower rental rate subsidized by advertising, which the city of Boston didn’t want, Trus said. Plan B for BikeNow, which based its service on Paris’ Velib program, and would act as local operators for the B-Cycle organization’s technology, is to roll out the service in Baltimore, said Trus, a Maryland native.

Gizmodo: Altitude’s LightLane in production

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Gizmodo notes that LightLane, a product designed for a competition by Somerville product design firm Altitude, is being manufactured.

LightLane is a small LED projector that attaches to a bike under the seat. When switched on, it projects a green, luminous bike lane on either side of the bike, the authority of which Boston drivers will doubtlessly respect.  

Ironically, Altitude is located in the one place in the Paris of the West where you may not need a LightLane — on its bike path.

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