Wow – an armed robbery at the new HSBC branch on Bedford Avenue. Luckily no one was hurt, but scary stuff indeed.
Armed Robbery at Bedford Avenue HSBC
Brooklyn Flea Expands to Williamsburg this Weekend
At the Edge.
Digital Subscription Prices Vizualized
Via Gruber (again), a handy infographic on what’s wrong the Times online subscription pricing. For what the Times is charging, you could subscribe to the Economist and the Wall Street Journal (both quality publications) and still have enough left over for a Netflix account.
Williamsburgh Savings Bank Plans Revealed (Somewhat)
The Architects Newspaper has some stunning photos of the interior and exterior of the Williamsburgh Savings Bank at Broadway and Driggs (George B. Post, 1875 and 1905).
They also have news on the plan for the building, which is for a catering hall and gallery/museum. But no word on what is to happen on the former parking lot to the west. Though, as A|N notes, it is as-of-right for residential with ground floor retail (also no word on the floor area – the bank may well have excess air rights that can transferred over to the development site portion of the project).
Pricing Should Be Simple
John Gruber:
One thing many companies — in any industry — can learn from Apple is the importance of simple pricing. If you make it easy for people to understand how much they’re paying, and what they’re paying for, it is more likely that they’ll buy it.
Amen.
I used to pay a dollar a day to read the Times, plus more on Sunday. I stopped buying the daily paper when they raised the price to $1.25 or $1.50 – just more change to fish around for, plus I could read it online for free. I read most of the paper online on a daily basis, using a variety of devices from a variety of locations. I even buy the physical paper on occasion (usually Sundays). I get it all (mostly) for free, but I would gladly pay for the content (as I do for other content). I pay $30 a year just to get access to their crossword puzzles.
In other words, I should be the Times’ ideal demographic for their new pay service. But I’m not buying.
$455 a year for unlimited device access is too much. Paying less and only being able to read the paper from some devices is not progress.
$185 a year ($15 per month) is closer to reasonable, and I would probably buy in at that level (though I suspect I would be a minority). But that means buying a physical (paper) subscription that I don’t want and won’t read most days. So after someone drives a physical paper to my house, I will just throw it straight into recycling.
Way to be green, Grey Lady.
P.S. If I understand their FAQs (yes, there are more than one) right, I’ll still have to pony up $30 a year for the crossword.
Soup Kitchen Community Work Day
This Saturday: help get the Greenpoint Soup Kitchen’s community garden ready for another season.
Border War
Aaron Short has the latest on the effort to get the MTA out of 65 Commercial Street (something that 6 years ago they promised to do). Maspeth continues to oppose the relocation of Access-a-Ride vehicles to their district (even though the site being studied is in a manufacturing zone and is zoned for parking). The MTA, for its part, hasn’t even committed to the Maspeth site (it’s under study), so expect more foot dragging on that front.
West Williamsburg
The Observer has discovered a new neighborhood right in our midst! West Williamsburg, for those of you not familiar with it, is a quaint neighborhood in North Brooklyn west of the BQE. It’s a lot like Williamsburg, but upgraded a bit (“most of West Williamsburg’s avenues are lined with brownstones“).
Oh, and its gentrifying. “The parents in the nursery school have changed from locals to investment bankers,” said Peter Kos, “a five-year resident”.
Or not – “I started out paying $1,600 nine years ago. I only pay $1,800 for the same one,” said one local.
Maybe if the reporter had done some reporting instead of just looking for stereotypes, he would have learned that we already have a names for the neighborhood. We call it the Northside and the Southside, or just plain Williamsburg.
Upstanding Citizens
The premise:
A four month-long highly-detailed, first-hand perspective documenting rush-hour subway etiquette toward a pregnant woman in New York City.
The results:
People on the G train are seat hogs; people on the L and the M train are far more considerate.
Straw Men on 10-Speeds
Chaban (as usual) nails it – this time on the bike lanes as proxy in a culture war.
Four of [NYC’s] boroughs have the worst commute times in the country, according to the Census Bureau. Meanwhile, MetroCards have surpassed $100 a month as service is curtailed. Bridge tolls have jumped to boot. And yet here comes the mayor and his men (and, in this case, one particular woman), painting green stripes all over town, promoting what many see as little more than a children’s toy.