renaming of cities, airports, etc...
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In South Africa, there was a wave of renaming in the mid-1990s, but it's starting to happen again and I'm interested to find out what the international view is. The 2 latest renaming proposals are to change the capital's name from Pretoria to Tswane. The other is to change "Johannesburg International Airport" (was Jan Smuts in 1990's) to "Oliver Thambo International Airport". My issue is not the actual renaming, but rather the following: - it makes SA look unstable in political terms, I think - the several billion Rand that will be used to change these names should rather be used to curb the crime and corruption in our country. Does renaming happen in other parts of the world? What about renaming twice in 10 years? Cheers, Simon > blog:: brokenkeyboards > my opinion of VS05 :: here > CV :: PDF > skype me! :: SimonMStewart
Yeh you are true it brings out Political imbalance . but we cannot change the tendency to change . (universal law) Vikas Amin Embin Technology Bombay
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!!!!!!!!!! I'm singing that song now in my head - Thank you grrrrrrrrrrrrrr I still remember having to write your own code in FORTRAN rather than be a cut and paste merchant being pampered by colour coded Intellisense - ahh proper programming - those were the days :)
Its nooooobodies business but the Tuuurks!! cruel, aren't I? Iain.
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We don't get too much of that where I live in the United States. What we do is tack on additional, equivalent names. For example, the primary east/west route through my town (Xenia, Ohio) and the next major city (Dayton) is U.S. route 35. In various places, it is also known as East Main Street (in my town), the Korean Veterans Memorial Parkway (a stretch between here and Dayton), and so on. There is one major street in Dayton that has five names over the course of its length. Every little two-bit municipality along the way changes the name of their stretch.
Software Zen:
delete this;
Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
We don't get too much of that where I live in the United States.
Remembering my history reading (Bill Bryson in this case), the USPO did a lot of enforced renaming early 20th century. All the burghs -> burgs, only one town name (eg. Jerusalem) per state etc. It wasn't a federal law as such, but you had to adhere to the Post Office rules if you wanted your mail delived, so... Iain.
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I think locations should be named using GUIDs. It's so much easier to remember (and index)
108b0750-82d6-11da-a72b-0800200c9a66
thanVatsala Bai Desai Chowk
. And it makes for scintillating cocktail party conversation too."Sally and I had a WONDERFUL time in
4a320b25-c869-4442-b6c3-eec1bd443a5a
. We visited thea6d09623-6d36-4302-9282-bb05fb6d415b
in, sailed down the4a320b25-c869-4442-b6c3-eec1bd443a5a
, and went skiing in the7717d6fc-48db-46d3-8bfd-f91ea39b913b
."/ravi My new year's resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Music | Articles | Freeware | Trips ravib(at)ravib(dot)com
If this was /. I'd think you were serious ;P The tigress is here :-D
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In South Africa, there was a wave of renaming in the mid-1990s, but it's starting to happen again and I'm interested to find out what the international view is. The 2 latest renaming proposals are to change the capital's name from Pretoria to Tswane. The other is to change "Johannesburg International Airport" (was Jan Smuts in 1990's) to "Oliver Thambo International Airport". My issue is not the actual renaming, but rather the following: - it makes SA look unstable in political terms, I think - the several billion Rand that will be used to change these names should rather be used to curb the crime and corruption in our country. Does renaming happen in other parts of the world? What about renaming twice in 10 years? Cheers, Simon > blog:: brokenkeyboards > my opinion of VS05 :: here > CV :: PDF > skype me! :: SimonMStewart
Oh jeez. I thought the point of renaming the airports to generic city names rather than new political figures was to prevent any future hard feelings. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Colib and ilikecameras. K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
We don't get too much of that where I live in the United States.
Remembering my history reading (Bill Bryson in this case), the USPO did a lot of enforced renaming early 20th century. All the burghs -> burgs, only one town name (eg. Jerusalem) per state etc. It wasn't a federal law as such, but you had to adhere to the Post Office rules if you wanted your mail delived, so... Iain.
Iain Clarke wrote:
Remembering my history reading (Bill Bryson in this case), the USPO did a lot of enforced renaming early 20th century. All the burghs -> burgs, only one town name (eg. Jerusalem) per state etc. It wasn't a federal law as such, but you had to adhere to the Post Office rules if you wanted your mail delived, so...
What was Pittsburgh's secret then; just sheer size (was as big as #2 nationally at one point), or something else?
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Iain Clarke wrote:
Remembering my history reading (Bill Bryson in this case), the USPO did a lot of enforced renaming early 20th century. All the burghs -> burgs, only one town name (eg. Jerusalem) per state etc. It wasn't a federal law as such, but you had to adhere to the Post Office rules if you wanted your mail delived, so...
What was Pittsburgh's secret then; just sheer size (was as big as #2 nationally at one point), or something else?
dan neely wrote:
What was Pittsburgh's secret then
Probably sheer stubbornness. And (as you say) it was big enough to fight back. Mind you, I'm remembering something I read in a book a few years ago. Expert, I am not! Iain.
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Farhan Noor Qureshi wrote:
I am glad they did. Trivandrum is way easier than Thiruvananthapuram
:confused: The name used to be "Trivandrum" which has been changed to "Thiruvananthapuram" now. So, the current name is actually a more complicated one. Why are you glad they did that? Regards, Nish
My blog : Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET
Oops I thought it was the other way around. :-> What I meant to say is Trivandrum was easier than Thiruvananthapuram :^) Farhan Noor Qureshi if (this == this) thow this;
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dan neely wrote:
What was Pittsburgh's secret then
Probably sheer stubbornness. And (as you say) it was big enough to fight back. Mind you, I'm remembering something I read in a book a few years ago. Expert, I am not! Iain.
Iain Clarke wrote:
dan neely wrote: What was Pittsburgh's secret then Probably sheer stubbornness. And (as you say) it was big enough to fight back.
Annother posibility that's just occured was Carnegie could've done it with a single phonecall. He'd have no trouble buying enough congress critters to get everyone involved looking for a new job if the postmaster general didn't play ball.
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Glad to see a fellow Ohioan on these boards. I am from Van Wert near Lima. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
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Oops I thought it was the other way around. :-> What I meant to say is Trivandrum was easier than Thiruvananthapuram :^) Farhan Noor Qureshi if (this == this) thow this;
Ok, no probs then :-) Regards, Nish
My blog : Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET