The city of traffic jams

We recently blogged about how traffic jams cost UK drivers 32 hours a year and London drivers in particular suffer 66 hours a year; wasting precious unproductive time.

We thought London was bad until we see images of Sao Paolo; the city of traffic jams and we realise how lucky we are.

The biggest city in Brazil has 11M people is perhaps the world’s most congested city, with  all the tailbacks in and out of the city extending for a total of 180km (112 miles) on a normal Friday evening. The distance from London to Birmingham!

Sao Paolo “sea of cars” (source: bbc.co.uk)

Fabiana Crespo, a local, who spends more than 4 hours travelling from home to work and back, calls it “the sea of cars”. “We have become slaves of traffic and we have to plan our lives around it,” she said.

The traffic in Sao Paolo is so bad that there is a 24/7 radio station, Sul America Traffic Radio, dedicated to reporting traffic conditions and alternative routes to motorists.

Victoria Ribeiro, a reporter whose job is to drive around the city to find alternative routes, said:”I have been working with the radio since its beginnings and we can see the traffic is only getting worse, as more cars are coming onto the streets.”

When terrible traffic condition is a frustration for the majority of the city motorists, the wealthy are offered a solution; private hire helicopters.

Sergio Alcibiades who uses the helicopter taxi service to meet clients few times a month says”If I hire a helicopter for a few hours I can hop between helipads and have three or four meetings in one day, which would be impossible if I had to move back and forth by car. For me this is a tool to make money.”

We seriously hope no city in the UK is going to face as many traffic jams as Sao Paoloor else we might experience something even worse; helicopter jams!

 

Chance Delivers some Presents for the Postmen

We all look for ways to improve our luck, but perhaps the postmen from Buckie, Banffshire, have found a secret formula. Jamie Shewan, 35, is the third employee of the Buckie Royal Mail delivery office to win big on the lotto. This most recent success puts the building’s total prize money at over £500,000. So what could possibly explain this run of good fortune?

Jamie the lucky postie (source: Daily Record)

Since the dawn of time, physicians have told us that sea-air is the secret to wellbeing. Have the Northern Winds of the Scottish coast finally provided us with proof? With average October rainfall in Buckie hitting 72.5 mm, residents will be watching out to see if the dark clouds have a silver-lining next month.

Or perhaps we are witnessing Karma in action. Postmen certainly do their share of giving while delivering streams of letters and packages, so this could be the world returning the favour. The Royal Mail certainly hopes so, releasing a statement that ‘their colleagues around Scotland will be hoping that their luck rubs off on them.’

If Karma is the cause, then the transportation industry is surely the place to be. It may be more than love of his job that has led Jamie to vow to keep working as a postman. Why change a winning formula?

iPhone Addiction Leads to Acute Gullibility

Apple fans will be well aware of and getting excited about the imminent launch of the new iPhone 5. Thanks to the Jimmy Kimmel show, these lucky people got a sneak preview of the new handset – or so they were led to believe.

Judging by the confident assertions of the clear superiority of the new model, we’re guessing most of these peopel were pretty embarrassed when they found out it was in fact just an iPhone 4s, identical to their current handsets. Just a shame they didn’t film the reactions afterwards!

Classic Construction Mistake

At first glance, not much seems to be wrong with this picture. These construction workers are diligently putting the finishing touches to some new bollards they’ve installed to stop people parking on the pavement outside a public building.

Constructions workers busy installing bollards around their own van

All that’s left to do after their hard work is done is to pack up and drive away… Ah. Woops!

The DeLorean is Back to the Future in 2013

Shoulder pads, acid brights, MC hammer pants, even Indiana Jones – no stone seems to have been left unturned in the wake of our current long-running obsession with that most dubious of decades, the 1980s.

The DeLorean DMC-12 set for a 2013 comeback (Picture: Complex.com)

Was it the thrill of power dressing, the intoxicating aroma of Chaps Musk, the crushed-velvet tones of Rick Astley promising never to give us up?

Whatever the magic ingredient that keeps pulling us back, every now and again a genuine gem emerges from the ocean of ‘80s revival tat we’ve immersed ourselves in since the dawn of the new millennium.

This week brought one such gem with the news that the DeLorean will re-enter production in 2013, this time in a new and environmentally-improved electric incarnation.

Back to the Future fans will be disappointed to learn that time travel functionality won’t come as standard, in fact, the specs err on the side of underwhelming, with a top speed of around 125MPH and 260 horsepower.

But hey, who cares about the details when you look this fresh.

The Cardboard Bicycle

Of all the materials to make a bicycle out of, cardboard would probably have been the last on our list, but this beautiful cardboard bicycle by inventor Izhar Gafni has blown all of our preconceptions about the material out of the water.

At a cost of only $9 each to make, not only is this an affordable option, but also far less appealing to thieves. And no, it doesn’t go soggy in the rain!

Mixed Messages

Here at Shiply we’re big fans of road safety initiatives, but we can’t help but wonder at the mixed messages going on in this well-meaning but misguided road sign.

The road safety sign that seems to contradict itself

Admittedly, we can’t vouch 100% for the authenticity of this picture, but it’s not beyond the realm of possibility that this is out there somewhere in the real world making drivers smile as they pass it by. We just hope that none of them follow the instructions on the sign while they’re on the road!

Producing Electricity From Shoppers’ Steps

Have you ever come back exhausted from a day’s shopping and wondered where all your energy went?

Pavegen's kinetic paving slab (Picture: Wired.co.uk)

The chances are you probably covered some distance rushing from shop to shop trying to catch a bargain and much of your energy will have been absorbed by the concrete of the pavement.

In an innovative bid to put this wasted energy to use, London’s Westfield City Shopping Centre has become the first place in the UK to place an order for some rather snazzy sounding Pavegen slabs.

The rubber slabs use kinetic energy (that’s the energy generated by the movement of walking, for example), to convert shoppers’ footsteps into electricity.

The colourful rubber squares will be scattered among the normal paving slabs of the shopping centre, and will flex about 5mm when stepped on.

It’s this flexing that allows the slab to absorb the kinetic energy from the footstep either to be stored in a lithium polymer battery or be used instantly to power nearby electric appliances, such as lights.

In order to minimise the impact of the environment of manufacturing the slabs, each one is made from recycled materials such as old tyres and has an estimated life-span of 5 years, or approximately 20 million steps.

Not only will these innovative gadgets create 2.1 watts of sustainable electricity per hour for the shopping centre, they’ll look pretty cool too – each one will glow faintly when stepped on, at a cost of only 5 per cent of the energy produced by the slab itself.

With around 30 million shoppers visiting Westfield each year (and we can imagine lots of kids excited by the magic glow), these green gadgets are set to be a sure-fire hit.

The Flying Pizza Delivery Service

It’s Friday night and after last week’s bank holiday celebrations, many of you are probably planning a quiet night in watching the Paralympics and eating takeaway.

Once you’re nice and settled on the sofa, even the short walk to open the door to the pizza delivery man can seem like a lot of effort – how much better would it be if the pizza could just fly through an open window to be delivered straight to your lap?

Well this invention by some students at the Freie Universität Berlin can do just that! We’re sorely tempted to commission one for our local pizzeria. Wonder if it could be adapted for currys and kebabs?