▲ | II2II 6 days ago | |||||||||||||
I live in a "walkable city". By walkable, I mean the old parts of the city that predated the automobile (and weren't destroyed in the name of modernization) are walkable. New parts of the city are completely unwalkable. If you came here, you would notice that massive numbers of people walk in the old parts of the city. Even the people who drive into the old parts of the city tend to walk once they are there. In the new parts of the city, virtually all of the pedestrians you see are on their way to or from a bus stop. That said, there is more to a walkable city than a bunch of sidewalks. It also has to offer what people want and what they want must be easy to access. Something similar can be said about piracy. It wasn't streaming services that stymied piracy, it was cheap and easy access to legal sources of music and video. Even then, cheap was likely a secondary factor (as long as the price was reasonable). | ||||||||||||||
▲ | cyberax 5 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
> By walkable, I mean the old parts of the city that predated the automobile (and weren't destroyed in the name of modernization) are walkable. OK. Here's my question: is it possible and feasible to NOT walk? Because when the answer is "yes", people tend to not walk. | ||||||||||||||
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