Lucas
A question: If we include, following 'TeleAtlas' for instance, to map such
countless bits of space as 'The ramp to the car park at 1-19 Torrington
Plc' or 'The entrance to the emergency services at UCH' into a street
network, could it change its degree distribution from a 'log-normal' to
a 'power-law'? If so, can we really claim that the degree distribution of
street networks does not follow a power law but a log-normal?
Regards,
Hoon
>On Thu, 31 May 2007 19:24:49 +0100, Lucas Figueiredo
><[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>>On 31/05/07, Rui Carvalho <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>> Pitty no one knows what a street is...
>>
>>Certainly it is not a segment (or route) between two junctions.
>>Otherwise we would have things like "Oxford Street sector A, B, C" and
>>so on...
>
>The ramp to the car park at 1-19 Torrington Plc. This comes in GPS car
>navigation systems as a decision point? is it a street?
>
>The entrance to the emergency services at UCH (that's UCL Hospital for
non
>Londoners). Is it a street?
>
>This question appears when you process data from services like TeleAtlas -
>the most accurate data available on street networks...
>
>Looks like Alan should organize that 'mass observation' on what a street
>is after all...
>
>Comments welcome!
>
>Rui
>
>
>>
>>Regards,
>>
>>Lucas Figueiredo
>>http://www.flickr.com/photos/lucasfigueiredo/
>>
>>Mindwalk
>>http://www.mindwalk.com.br
>========================================================================
|