abstreet
zotero
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abstreet | zotero | |
---|---|---|
56 | 254 | |
7,303 | 9,176 | |
0.7% | 3.7% | |
8.9 | 9.9 | |
10 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Rust | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
abstreet
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Show HN: I built a transit travel time map
Super awesome! I like how you just color roads to show time. When you calculate polygons to try and cover the whole area in some 5-10 minute bucket, you can wind up with all sorts of odd holes far away from roads. Keep it simple.
https://github.com/a-b-street/abstreet/pull/1075
- A/B Street: Transportation planning and traffic simulation for friendlier cities
- A/B Street
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Egregoria is a city simulation with high granularity
A|B Street does some of that, but it is not a game: https://github.com/a-b-street/abstreet
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Not a Surprise: 101 Freeway Widening Shows Negative Results
You can build it out in a cool simulator and show it off.
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Bay Area drivers spend 97 hours a year in traffic. Why didn’t remote work end commute nightmares?
The tool you want exists, but you'll need to actually build the city in it. It's really an incredible program!
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Ask HN: Who is hiring? (December 2022)
Active Travel England | Software Developers and Data Engineer | Full or Part Time | https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/active-travel-en...
Active Travel England will be developing tools to support evidence-based investment and policies to support sustainable transport. We're hiring 3 roles at present (there will be more jobs in January): https://www.civilservicejobs.service.gov.uk/csr/index.cgi?SI...
We are already working with the transport simulation and scenario development tool A/B Street and the Low Traffic Neighbourhood design tool: https://a-b-street.github.io/docs/ and plan to create new web applications to transform active travel infrastructure design, monitoring and evaluation.
An exciting thing about these jobs from a software engineering perspective is that you will be starting with a relatively blank slate. In the UK we already have tools like https://bikedata.cyclestreets.net and https://www.pct.bike/ but need to go further than this. Long term, the 7 strong Data and Digital team that you will be part of will develop a comprehensive map based design support tool to provide data of the type in BikeData (and more datasets), drawing tools, and automated assessment of proposed interventions.
These opportunities will enable you to shape the future of tools for active travel investment and policy in England and, because the software develop as part of these roles will be open source, beyond.
These high profile jobs will have a large impact, see here for context: https://twitter.com/Chris_Boardman/status/159648662743800217...
- Offline public transport navigation tool for simulations
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mutli Agent simulation
I don't know the topic well enough to be sure, but isn't this what you're looking for: https://github.com/a-b-street/abstreet
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34 extremely good websites(to have fun) that most people probably don't know about - dancing robots you can fling, 180 websites in 180 days, hot or not for generative art, draw auroras
https://github.com/a-b-street/abstreet - project to plan, simulate, and communicate visions for making cities friendlier to people walking, biking, and taking public transit.
zotero
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Google Scholar PDF Reader
Maybe try Zotero[1]. There are many addons which can do what you need.
[1]https://www.zotero.org/
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I wrote my bibliography manually (Dont ask why). How do I sort it by the first letter of each entry?
And next time, you use a real literature management program like zotero (some university libraries offer classes, there is a r/zotero, etc) or jabref to create a proper bibtex file with the references. It is not that difficult, and keeps you sane (esp. if a paper has to be formatted for a different publisher). See e.g. learnlatex.
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Ask HN: Who is hiring? (December 2023)
Zotero | Remote | Full-Time or Part-Time | https://www.zotero.org
Zotero is an open-source project that develops software to help people collect, organize, annotate, cite, and share their research. Our software is recommended by most universities and used by millions of students, scholars, scientists, and researchers worldwide.
We're looking for a JavaScript developer to work on Zotero "translators" — the pieces of code that let people click a button in their browser toolbar on any webpage and save high-quality metadata and files to their Zotero libraries. If you like web scraping, APIs, data formats, and exploring sites in the browser devtools, this would be up your alley. As a core Zotero developer, you'll also have the ability to work across Zotero's vast ecosystem and help shape the future of the project.
This is an open-ended contract role that can scale up and down in hours based on availability and workload.
https://www.zotero.org/jobs
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Show HN: Odin – the integration of LLMs with Obsidian note taking
Zotero is your answer, it even auto generates your citations.
https://www.zotero.org/
Apparently there are plugins for Logseq and Obsidian as well.
- Ask HN: How do you use your iPad?
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A collection of useful Mac Apps
Zotero - Price: Free Free and open-source reference manager that helps you collect, organize, and cite your research sources.
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Is there an equivalent of calibredb for research papers?
I use the free and open source Zotero which I think you'd find very calibre-like and manage notes and concept linking with org-roam in emacs.
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Will I lose everything on Zotero?
If you can't hold the urge to know, you can check on the Zotero web library if all of your things are still there
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Advice for Thesis students
Resources: ZOTERO. Zotero is a free (you can pay to get more storage), open-source citation manager with optional browser plugins. IT WILL FORMAT CITATIONS FOR YOU. (sometimes you have to edit them, but most of the time it can pull metadata and format things correctly on its own). You can sort your references into folders or with tags, read and annotate PDF copies on your computer or in a mobile app, and make notes - which I used to keep track of specific quotations I wanted to use.
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Extra Reading for Archaeology / Ancient History
You can also use online resources like The Encyclopedia of Archaeological Sciences, that I think is mostly free or the Handbook of Archaeological Sciences which I think is also mostly free. If you can't get a hold of those things you can also email the authors/editors and they might send you a free copy or look them up on Academia.edu and see if they have a free version. Also, if you don't already, use Google Scholar, it's the best resource for finding free articles and topics to read. It's also never too early to start using something like Zotaro, Mendeley, or Endnote to keep track of your readings and help you with citations/references in papers. You can literally download the citation, import it into one of those systems and it automatically formats your referencing.
What are some alternatives?
prettymaps - A small set of Python functions to draw pretty maps from OpenStreetMap data. Based on osmnx, matplotlib and shapely libraries.
calibre - The official source code repository for the calibre ebook manager
tilemaker - Make OpenStreetMap vector tiles without the stack
jabref - Graphical Java application for managing BibTeX and biblatex (.bib) databases
osm-renderer - OpenStreetMap raster tile renderer written in Rust
obsidian-citation-plugin - Obsidian plugin which integrates your academic reference manager with the Obsidian editor. Search your references from within Obsidian and automatically create and reference literature notes for papers and books.
grid2demand - A tool for generating zone-to-zone travel demand based on grid zones and gravity model
Zettlr - Your One-Stop Publication Workbench
awesome-vector-tiles - Awesome implementations of the Mapbox Vector Tile specification
notion-auto-pull - Bash script to automatically download a notion workspace
owid-grapher - A platform for creating interactive data visualizations
zotero-mdnotes - A Zotero plugin to export item metadata and notes as markdown files