Conversation

In "Where Is My Flying Car", Hall argues that what we really value in cities isn't necessarily physical density, but *temporal* density—ie low travel time. If all points were 5x further apart, but we move 5x faster, we'd prefer it: everyone could have more space. Is this right? /
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Not sure if temporal density is equivalent to physical density for the purposes of serendipity. If I only run into people at destinations, then there'd be no change if everything were spread out: the same people visit the same restaurants. But I run into people while walking!
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One fun way to describe this book: the narrative is a sort of glue which holds together a non-stop parade of Fermi estimates. These results are probably much less surprising to a physicist, but snippets like this are truly shocking to me!
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