Evernote 3.5.1.1410
Posted by Celia Walter | 14 Feb, 2010http://www.evernote.com/
Temporary road closures for Opening of Parliament to affect the public
The table of the closures below shows which roads will be affected. These roads surround the Parliamentary precinct and are along the route that the President is to travel. Motorists are advised to avoid these roads as well as roads leading to the processional route between 16:30 and 22:00. Road users are requested to use alternative routes (especially when going to the airport), as the road closures may lead to congestion and excessive delays. Visitors to the Artscape, City Hall and the V & A Waterfront will also be affected as both the M3/Eastern Boulevard and De Waal Drive will be closed until 19:00. Motorists should instead wait until after 19:00 before driving along these routes.
Maps of the closures can be viewed here: Map 1; Map 2; Map 3
| Affected Road | 9 February 2010 | 11 February 2010 |
| Klipper Road, Newlands: from Main Road (M4) to Newlands Avenue | 17:45-18:50 | |
| Princess Anne Avenue, Newlands: from Newlands Avenue to Union Avenue | 17:45-18:50 | |
| Newlands Avenue, Newlands: from Dean Street to Princess Anne Avenue | 17:45-18:50 | |
| Dean Street, Newlands, west-bound: from Main Road (M4) to Newlands Avenue | 17:45-18:50 | |
| M3, Union Avenue, Rhodes Drive, De Waal Drive, city-bound carriageway: from Newlands Avenue to city centre | 17:45-18:50 | |
| Woolsack Drive, Rondebosch, west-bound: between Main Road (M4) and Rhodes Drive (M3) | 17:45-18:50 | |
| N2, Settlers Way city-bound carriageway: from Main Road (M4) to city centre | 17:45-18:50 | |
| Eastern Boulevard (N2) city-bound: from Hospital Bend to Table Bay Boulevard (including the Melbourne Road, Roodebloem Road and Searle Street on-ramps) | 17:45-18:50 | |
| Hertzog Boulevard: from Eastern Boulevard to Heerengracht | 17:30-22:30 | 17:45-18:50 |
| Eastern Boulevard: Strand Street off-ramp | 17:30-22:30 | 17:45-18:50 |
| Strand Street: from Russel Street to Long Street | 17:30-22:30 | 16:30-20:00 |
| Adderley Street: from Hans Strijdom Avenue to Wale Street | 17:30-22:30 | 16:30-20:00 |
| Heerengracht: between Coen Steytler and Hans Strijdom Avenues | 17:30-22:30 | 16:30-20:00 |
| Bureau Street: between Adderley and Parliament Street | 17:30-22:30 | 16:30-20:00 |
| Spin Street: between Corporation and Parliament Street | 17:30-22:30 | 16:30-20:00 |
| Wale Street: between Queen Victoria and Adderley Street | 16:30-20:00 | |
| Commercial Street: between Plein and Buitenkant Street | 16:30-20:00 | |
| Plein Street: between Roeland and Spin Streets | 16:30-20:00 | |
| Roeland Street: between Plein and Buitenkant Street | 16:30-20:00 | |
| Government Avenue | 16:30-20:00 | |
| Gallery Lane | 16:30-20:00 | |
| St John's Road: between Plein and Vrede Street | 16:30-20:00 | |
| Parliament Street from Gates of Parliament to Spin Street | 19:40-20:00 | |
| Spin Street and Bureau Street from Plein Street to Adderley Street | 19:40-20:00 | |
| Adderley Street from Wale Street to Table Bay Boulevard | 19:40-20:00 | |
| Hans Strijdom from Adderley Street to Lower Long Street | 19:40-20:00 | |
| Lower Long Street from Hans Strijdom to Coen Steytler | 19:40-20:00 |
Please note these times have been moved forward by one hour.
Parliament
will officially open on Thursday 11 February 2010 at 19:00 when
President Jacob Zuma delivers the State of the Nation Address to the
Joint Sitting of Parliament.
As this event, which is usually held in the morning, is to be an evening one, traffic will be heavily affected. The public are advised to please take note of the closures and arrange their routes accordingly. Traffic will also be disrupted on 9 February 2010 for rehearsals of the event. The table of the closures below shows which roads will be affected. These roads surround the Parliamentary precinct and are along the route that the President is to travel. Motorists are advised to avoid these roads as well as roads leading to the processional route between 16:30 and 22:00. Road users are requested to use alternative routes (especially when going to the airport), as the road closures may lead to congestion and excessive delays. Visitors to the Artscape, City Hall and the V & A Waterfront will also be affected as both the M3/Eastern Boulevard and De Waal Drive will be closed until 19:00. Motorists should instead wait until after 19:00 before driving along these routes. Maps of the closures can be viewed here: Map 1; Map 2; Map 3
Please note these times have been moved forward by one hour. 1. M5, Black River Parkway, then onto the N1, Table Bay Boulevard.
Traffic control
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| Martin Pollack |
http://www.caranddriver.com/features/09q4/how_to_deal_with_unintended_acceleration-tech_dept
While Toyota owners nervously wait for their accelerators to be fixed, this tells them what to do if their car does start running away with them. Also, the Consumer Reports Cars Blog says "the warning signs of trouble... may include the accelerator pedal being harder to depress, slower to return to its upper position, or simply not operating smoothly" http://blogs.consumerreports.org/cars/
From Neat New Stuff I Found This Week
http://marylaine.com/neatnew.html
an article by: Andy Burkhardt. Emerging Technology Librarian, Champlain College
Because of the ubiquity of social media use, academic libraries can leverage these communication tools to interact with faculty, staff, and students in new ways. It is often difficult in academic libraries to spread the word about different events or services that the library is offering. Social media provides another vein in which to market new library products or initiatives.
In addition to marketing, the simple act of having conversations and creating relationships with patrons is immensely useful. Through conversations on social media, libraries can gain insights into what their users want and need and ultimately understand their users better.
Many libraries are already experimenting with different social media services like Twitter or Facebook to interact and connect with their patrons, yet there are still a number of questions that come up as this is still fairly new territory. “How do I get started?” “What sorts of things should I post?” “How can I grow our social media presence and gain more fans or followers?”
A Full Text PDF Version of the Article (4 Pages) is Also Available
Source: College and Research Library News
From : The Resourceshelf
Jan 28th 2010 | From The Economist print edition
IF THERE is one thing that could halt the ascent of social networks, it is the vexed question of privacy. This is controversial because it goes right to the heart of the social-networking business model. In order to attract users, sites need to offer ways for members to restrict the information about themselves that gets shared with a wider public. Without effective controls people would be reluctant to sign up. But if a site allows members to keep too much of their information private, there will be less traffic that can be turned into profit through advertising and various other means, so the network’s business will suffer... More
*
Jim Till showed how to use the PubMed Advanced Search option to
estimate the number of papers based on research by a given funder are
free online. (His immediate purpose was to estimate how many
CIHR-funded papers, which ought to be OA, are actually OA.)
http://tillje.wordpress.com/2010/01/08/preliminary-data-about-cihr-supported-publications-cited-in-pubmed/
* Heather Morrison showed how to use the PubMed Advanced Search
option to estimate the number of papers published in a given journal
are free online. In a separate post she showed how TA medical journals
with green policies (allowing authors to self-archive) can measure or
estimate the number of their articles on deposit in OA repositories.
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2010/01/calculating-compliance-with-nih-public.html
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2010/01/for-subscription-journals-calculating.html
* Wikipedia celebrated its ninth birthday.
http://blog.wikimedia.org/2010/01/15/another-year-wiser/
* More than 800 patents issued by the US in 2009 cited one or more Wikipedia articles, an increase of 59% from 2008.
http://patentlibrarian.blogspot.com/2010/01/wikipedia-citations-in-patents-up-59.html