Pages tagged sanfrancisco:

Adam's Block
http://www.adamsblock.com/

live web cam in SF (Tenderloin) with chat
The Big Eat SF: 100 Things to Try Before You Die | 7x7
http://www.7x7.com/content/eat-drink/big-eat-sf-100-things-try-you-die
60. The Brass Monkey at Little Star Pizza
L’Osteria del Forno
San Francisco.
DataSF - DataSF - Liberating City Data
http://www.datasf.org/
Why can't every city have this?
City of SF opens site containing datasets
"DataSF is a clearinghouse of datasets available from the City & County of San Francisco. While there is plenty of room for improvement, our goal in releasing this site is: 1) improve access to data, 2) help our community create innovative apps, 3) understand what datasets you'd like to see, 4) get feedback on the quality of our datasets."
"DataSF is a clearinghouse of datasets available from the City & County of San Francisco. While there is plenty of room for improvement, our goal in releasing this site is: (1) improve access to data (2) help our community create innovative apps (3) understand what datasets you'd like to see (4) get feedback on the quality of our datasets."
emptyage : Are You Going to San Francisco
http://emptyage.honan.net/mth/2009/07/are-you-going-to-san-francisco.html
e that a lot of people go through that starts when people go a little crazy as a result of all that, gradually realize that it's all a little illusory and that what they have instead of friends is a lot of the same awkward party conversations over and over, start working a little too hard to recapture the former glory, and end up burnt out and jaded. I'm not saying all of this can't be avoided, but to do so, I think you have to come in with more skepticism and awareness than the typical wide-eyed SF hipster-techie transplant does. Perhaps if I had come to SF with Caroline's wariness and your advice, I would have had a better time.
I don't think the world should look like San Francisco, nor do I think that it should be home for everyone. But if you're going to come here, even if it's only for a year, you should make the most of it. And to do that (and this really goes for anywhere) you need to embrace what's unique about it.
http://emptyage.honan.net/mth/2009/07/are-you-going-to-san-francisco.html
How to make the most of living in SF. Wouldn't that be very lovely? Anyway, I think these could probably be generalised as to how to enjoy any city. (via Kottke)
Alex Payne — So You're Moving to San Francisco
http://al3x.net/2009/10/04/so-youre-moving-to-san-francisco.html
Writing about a place is difficult. You can spend months, years, even a lifetime in a city and still not really know it. More challenging still, everyone experiences a place differently. Two people who’ve grown up in the same place might fundamentally disagree on what the most scenic landmarks are, if the locals are friendly, the best places to eat, and so on.
I’m going to skip right to the heart of what I want to say about this city: if you’ve never lived in a major city before, you’ll probably like San Francisco. However, if you’re coming from another notable city, you may be disappointed. Hopefully, that’s pretty uncontroversial.
sive, and cold. As above, it’s easy to meet people through work or a common
Alex describes why he will leave SF when he can. Me, I'm leaving for these and more complex reasons. He's so in the tech bubble and the world of food and art, he never mentions California's political mess, or the desertification going on. He's the sort of person he is warning us about: "oung white men with high technical proficiency and lots of disposable income."
Welcome - The Bold Italic - San Francisco
http://thebolditalic.com/
main feature is unique, but could use some additional html text, better color; but unique idea nonetheless
San Francisco – Pictory
http://www.pictorymag.com/showcases/san-francisco/
Twenty-four photo stories, four quotes, and an infographic describing the city by the bay.
Final edition: Twilight of the American newspaper—By Richard Rodriguez (Harper's Magazine)
http://harpers.org/archive/2009/11/0082712
"We will end up with one and a half cities in America -- Washington, D.C., and American Idol. We will all live in Washington, D.C., where the conversation is a droning, never advancing, debate between "conservatives" and "liberals." We will not read about newlyweds. We will not read about the death of salesmen. We will not read about prize Holsteins or new novels. We are a nation dismantling the structures of intellectual property and all critical apparatus. We are without professional book reviewers and art critics and essays about what it might mean that our local newspaper has died. We are a nation of Amazon reader responses (Moby Dick is "not a really good piece of fiction" -- Feb. 14, 2009, by Donald J. Bingle, Saint Charles, Ill. -- two stars out of five). We are without obituaries, but the famous will achieve immortality by a Wikipedia entry."
—By Richard Rodriguez (Harper's Magazine) An obit of the way we used to get news and for the public record keeper.
Twilight of the American newspaper tells the story of San Francisco and its newspapers. And in that tale, a glimpse that we might be losing our sense of place along with the newspaper.
441 – Sense of POPOS: Secret Spaces of San Francisco « Strange Maps
http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2010/01/28/441-sense-of-popos-secret-spaces-of-san-francisco/
Scattered across the centre of San Francisco are almost seventy semi-secret spaces, privately owned but open to the public. Subject to the fine print of a little-known pact between City and Commerce, these so-called POPOS (Privately Owned Public Open Spaces) allow alluring vistas of San Francisco and access to its intimate interiors. However, they are often poorly indicated – perhaps a deliberate tactic by the private companies who own the spaces to prevent the pesky public from using them. Accessing POPOS sometimes even requires walking past security guards, or through unmarked doors. No wonder many are underfrequented.
Scattered across the centre of San Francisco are almost seventy semi-secret spaces, privately owned but open to the public. Subject to the fine print of a little-known pact between City and Commerce, these so-called POPOS (Privately Owned Public Open Spaces) allow alluring vistas of San Francisco and access to its intimate interiors. However, they are often poorly indicated – perhaps a deliberate tactic by the private companies who own the spaces to prevent the pesky public from using them. Accessing POPOS sometimes even requires walking past security guards, or through unmarked doors. No wonder many are underfrequented. SPUR lists all 68 POPOS in downtown San Francisco and rates them from poor over good to fair and excellent. For a complete overview, download SPUR’s guide (see below). Or take one of the architectural tours leading you through the network of POPOS in San Francisco’s downtown. Below is a brief legend to the map above.
Privately Owned Public Open Spaces
Kind of want to make one of these for PDX.
Scattered across the centre of San Francisco are almost seventy semi-secret spaces, privately owned but open to the public. Subject to the fine print of a little-known pact between City and Commerce, these so-called POPOS (Privately Owned Public Open Spaces) allow alluring vistas of San Francisco and access to its intimate interiors. However, they are often poorly indicated – perhaps a deliberate tactic by the private companies who own the spaces to prevent the pesky public from using them. Accessing POPOS sometimes even requires walking past security guards, or through unmarked doors. No wonder many are underfrequented.
36 Hours in San Francisco’s Mission District - NYTimes.com
http://travel.nytimes.com/2008/09/14/travel/14hours.html
NYTimes -- 36 Hours in San Francisco’s Mission District
a bright corner cafe run partly by Mission High School students that sells scrumptious treats in collaboration with Pie Ranch, a nonprofit farm where teenagers learn about sustainable agriculture
sanfranfromairship.jpg (JPEG Image, 7000x2748 pixels)
http://www.abneypark.com/sanfranfromairship.jpg
.jpg (JPEG Image, 7000x2748 pixels) - Scaled (20%)
Journeys - In San Francisco Bars, a Cocktail Is Not Just a Drink - NYTimes.com
http://travel.nytimes.com/2008/12/28/travel/28journeys.html
Great place for an old-fashioned w/RAM
If San Francisco Crime were Elevation | Doug McCune
http://dougmccune.com/blog/2010/06/05/if-san-francisco-crime-was-elevation/
I’ve been playing with different ways of representing data (see my previous night lights example) and I decided to venture into 3D representations. I’ve used a full year of crime data for San Francisco from 2009 to create these maps. The full dataset can be download from the city’s DataSF website.
RT @brainpicker: San Francisco crime rates, visualized as topographic elevation http://bit.ly/bOlQAi