On Tuesday, Mayor Bloomberg announced that NYC will be the next American city to tick bike-sharing off its list. ‘Bout time. Given the recent firestorm over bike-lanes, you have to wonder how the city will convince the masses that this overt display of social-/communism is worthwhile, but the Bloomberg administration seems serious and they hope to have 10,000 bikes up and running as early as 2012. I have just one bone to pick (for now). From the NYTimes:
Each bicycle must have a working bell, a “transparent, porous” basket, an onboard GPS unit, a three-speed gear system, and front and rear lights that switch on automatically whenever the bicycle is in motion.
Bells, basket, 3-speeds, front and rear lights – sounds a lot like Bixi, tried and true. But wait, GPS? Really?? GPS?? I know it’s New York and everything’s gotta be the best and brightest but come on, let’s chill our boners here. Bixi makes a wonderful map, which you can get for free (in paper, not just online), that shows the different types of bike paths all across the city. It costs a lot less, it won’t ever break, no one could possibly give a shit to steal it, and most importantly, it requires you to think for 1 minute before you set off on your merry way. The amount of information presented on a map subtly forces you into a much richer understanding of where you actually are and how you get from point A to point B. If you’re a tourist who has never been to NYC, I guarantee that you could bike around NYC for a whole weekend, looking at your 3”x3” screen showing 250 square meters, and then head back the next weekend without a clue of how to get from Central Park to Washington Square (hint: go straight) because you never saw the two together at the same time, you don’t actually have an understanding of where the two are in relation to each other. Besides that, by putting a GPS on each bike, NYC is depriving people of the fun they didn’t even know they could have! There is something immensely satisfying about looking at two locations, thinking about how you want to get there, and BAM – it works! You arrive, all by your own gumption! Where is the fun in passively letting “tom tom” or whatever spit little arrows at you. Plus, how badly do we really want people biking around with their heads down, tapping on a little screen? OK fair, not as badly as we don’t need people riding bikes around trying to fold a map, but I’m assuming that most people would pause for a minute to read their map.
And in the bigger picture, weekend fun aside, GPS is making our spatial cognitive abilities more stupider. For my fellow McGillians, if any of you check the links in the “myNews’ section, you might have noticed this article about a recent study by McGill researchers.
But the researchers also found a greater volume of grey matter in the hippocampus of older adults who used spatial strategies. And these adults scored higher on a standardized cognition test used to help diagnose mild cognitive impairment, which is often a precursor to Alzheimer’s disease. These findings suggest that using spatial memory may increase the function of the hippocampus and increase our quality of life as we age, says Bohbot. More simply: it could be a case of use it or lose it (emphasis mine).
You see that? I will be expecting a written apology from anyone with whom I’ve ever had this argument. Man, vindication feels good. What that quote basically means that if we stop using our brains to get where we’re going and we fully rely on GPS, we’re going to lose something important. It’s not even the Alzheimer’s that scares me as much as the loss of general day-to-day cognitive ability. I urge you to think about that next time you’re in NYC testing out their new public bikes; take a look at your map, keep your head up while your riding. That is, unless Mayor Bloomberg reads my post.
EDIT: If the GPS referred to in the NYT article is actually just a tracking system to monitor how they’re used and to prevent theft, I’ll eat some of my words. Everything I said about maps still stands.