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15 votes
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Inglenook Shunting
3 votes -
Sofia, the historic airplane-borne telescope, lands for the last time
5 votes -
Denmark and Germany now building the world's longest immersed tunnel
8 votes -
Can software simplify the supply chain? Ryan Petersen thinks so
6 votes -
Heart Aerospace's current project is a thirty-passenger plane designed to have a fully battery-powered range of 200 kilometres
4 votes -
Scooters and three-wheelers are really what’s driving an EV revolution
9 votes -
Halting way to the right road – Dagen H is the day Sweden switched to driving on the right in 1967
8 votes -
Darius McCollum - How and why he stole 100s trains and busses
8 votes -
How a Swedish company's technology is powering electric ferries – Echandia is manufacturing heavy duty energy storage systems
5 votes -
Two Swedish filmmakers have been found guilty of illegally disturbing the MS Estonia ferry, which sank in 1994 killing 852 people
6 votes -
Not Just Bikes and Strong Towns discuss public transit in North America
4 votes -
What happened to flying wings?
7 votes -
Wooden bridge over a river in southern Norway collapsed early Monday – a similar nearby bridge, also made of glued laminated timber, collapsed in 2016
8 votes -
Investigating the mysteriously feel-good "Texas Turnaround"
11 votes -
Today, Brussels breaks up with the car
13 votes -
Inside the first undersea roundabout – one of the world's most remote construction projects can be found on the Faroe Islands
7 votes -
World's fastest electric ship will set sail in Stockholm next year – Candela P-12 is a thirty-passenger 'flying ferry' that will reach speeds of thirty knots
6 votes -
Why Swiss trains are the best in Europe
7 votes -
Landseaire, the crazy Catalina flying camper of the 1950s
1 vote -
Velocipedia - Bicycles based on people’s attempts to draw them from memory
16 votes -
Spain to introduce free train travel
13 votes -
Why Europe feels more accessible than the USA
8 votes -
Why rails buckle under the heat in Britain
6 votes -
North America always gets this wrong when building transit
11 votes -
Carbon hacking: Least carbon-intensive traveling between US and Europe
My life is split between the US and the Netherlands, where I have friends and work in both places. I try to fly as little as possible: only one intercontinental flight per year. But even that puts...
My life is split between the US and the Netherlands, where I have friends and work in both places. I try to fly as little as possible: only one intercontinental flight per year. But even that puts my individual carbon footprint far above the average human's. I buy carbon offsets but that just shifts responsibility.
I've long been deeply inspired by Greta Thunberg's protest act of sailing from England to New York to attend a 2019 climate summit. But sailing across the ocean in a racing yacht with a crew simply is too extreme.
So I'm curious what are the options for reducing carbon emissions when traveling between continents.
I've contemplated hopping on a freighter ship. My thinking is that: freighter ships are extremely efficient cargo-weight-to-emission ratio-wise, so the marginal carbon emission of me as added 'cargo' must be much lower than as another passenger on an airplane. Plus, the freighter ship will be sailing with or without me on board; whereas as a plane passenger I enable the business of a passenger flight.
6 votes -
The seven best steam train trips in the US
8 votes -
Arcades, churches and laundromats: A trucker’s haven on the precipice of change
5 votes -
Anger and heartbreak on Bus No. 15
4 votes -
What are some good YouTube channels about rapid transit?
I'm mostly interested in metro/subways, but also over the ground systems and rapid transit in general. Mostly the vehicles themselves, the rails, and the related technologies. I mean, I do enjoy...
I'm mostly interested in metro/subways, but also over the ground systems and rapid transit in general.
Mostly the vehicles themselves, the rails, and the related technologies. I mean, I do enjoy the city planning bits, but some channels focus too much on the design and evolution of the lines and I don't like that, looking at a map is not really enticing to me. A healthy mix would be nice, some engineering deep dives mixed with history, urban planning, and a lot of train porn! (Not rule 34 lol).
Thanks!
5 votes -
What actually happened to the Concorde
5 votes -
The Orange Pill - Your city will be changed forever
7 votes -
A subway shooting in NYC exposed many of the problems facing the city’s transit system
7 votes -
Tom Scott plus Colin Furze do something with hovercrafts
5 votes -
Inside Toronto's skyscraper boom
4 votes -
Northvolt and Norsk Hydro will take their battery recycling joint venture to Europe later this year after the Swedish start-up opened their first plant in Norway
5 votes -
Nurdles: The massive, unregulated source of plastic pollution you’ve probably never heard of
10 votes -
Turkey has built the longest suspension bridge in the world
5 votes -
Funchal Airport, on the island of Madeira, was too short for modern commercial airliners but there was nowhere to extend to. The solution is one of the greatest civil engineering projects of our time.
7 votes -
Norway seeks solution to looming EU tax on car batteries – batteries produced outside the UK or the EU after 2027 face a 10% customs tax
5 votes -
Downhill, on a couch, on public roads
8 votes -
Business parks don’t have to suck
10 votes -
Stranger accuses gay couple on Amtrak of molesting their own children
18 votes -
The world’s fastest bomber: The XB-70 Valkyrie
3 votes -
Sidewalk robots get legal rights as "pedestrians"
6 votes -
Tyre Extinguishers – deflating SUV tyres as a form of climate action
13 votes -
Four dead after US military plane crashes in Norway – MV-22B Osprey was taking part in NATO exercise 'Cold Response'
8 votes -
US skateboarder Josh Neuman, 22, among four people killed in Iceland plane crash
7 votes -
Tom Scott plus Lucy Edwards learn how to fly a plane blind
8 votes -
13,000 pounds at 118 miles per hour: It was the deadliest wreck in years. And the man behind it was one of the FBI’s most notorious informants.
18 votes