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Bronze_Colossus | 9 years ago
I also find these kind of things cool. Forgotten structures that once served an important roll but now are mostly forgotten.
Bronze_Colossus | 9 years ago
I also find these kind of things cool. Forgotten structures that once served an important roll but now are mostly forgotten.
grkvlt|9 years ago
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_archaeology [2] http://www.springer.com/gb/book/9780387226088
nitrogen|9 years ago
Terrible, terrible UX in the form of a jittery delayed popover that fills the entire phone screen. If you are going to do this (and I can't stand the fact that it actually works on many people), make it so easy to dismiss and fast to load that I close it instead of instictively hitting back.
Sanddancer|9 years ago
Shortly thereafter, though, a few things happened that made the arrows pretty obsolete. Mapping of course, was a big one; you could now navigate a lot more reliably through unknown territory. More importantly, a network of radio beacons was set up. Charts had lists of radio beacons, with their frequencies. Pilots could tune in to hear them repeatedly chirp their identification in morse code, and use radio direction finders to set their heading accordingly.
There's one other feature that was developed in that time period which also made pilots' navigation job a lot easier. The federal highway system meant that there were good, very visible, roads, serving as routing beacons in their own way. Pilots would, and still do for a lot of general aviation planes, route close to highways, because they're also a very obvious landmark that carves a path through the country.
cyberferret|9 years ago