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  3. renaming of cities, airports, etc...

renaming of cities, airports, etc...

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  • N Nish Nishant

    In Kerala (my state in India), they renamed a lot of cities back to their original Malayalam versions and it was a pain in the ass. For example, Trivandrum's official name is now Thiruvananthapuram (hope I spelled it right). Regards, Nish

    My blog : Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET

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    dl4gbe
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    Hallo Sure it happens. Think about the country Burma. Now they name it Myanmar Chris ;P

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    • D dl4gbe

      Hallo Sure it happens. Think about the country Burma. Now they name it Myanmar Chris ;P

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      Shog9 0
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      "Myanmar Shave"... just doesn't have the same ring, does it? :)

      ---- Scripts i've known... CPhog 0.9.9 - make CP better. Forum Bookmark 0.2.1 - bookmark forum posts on Pensieve Print forum 0.1.2 - printer-friendly forums

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      • V Vivek Rajan

        Hi Simon, You have company here. India is the king of renaming cities, roads, everything. It is th easiest way for politicians to show that something was done during their time. Most cities in Kerala were renamed, Bombay, Madras, Calcutta were renamed, now they are trying to rename Bangalore. There is no stopping them. After renaming the cities continue to be messed up and unable to provide basic living standards. Renaming twice - now that has not happened so far :-)

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        SimonS
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Regarding the airport, the government passed some law that said that airports would be named after the city and not a person. However they've changed the law so they can change the airport name too. Just seems such a waste of time and money. Cheers, Simon > blog:: brokenkeyboards > my opinion of VS05 :: here > CV :: PDF > skype me! :: SimonMStewart

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        • V Vivek Rajan

          Hi Simon, You have company here. India is the king of renaming cities, roads, everything. It is th easiest way for politicians to show that something was done during their time. Most cities in Kerala were renamed, Bombay, Madras, Calcutta were renamed, now they are trying to rename Bangalore. There is no stopping them. After renaming the cities continue to be messed up and unable to provide basic living standards. Renaming twice - now that has not happened so far :-)

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          dl4gbe
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Germany did this kind of thing too... They renamed cities. Karl Marx Stadt is named Chemnitz now. Chris ;P -- modified at 13:53 Wednesday 11th January, 2006

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          • V Vivek Rajan

            Hi Simon, You have company here. India is the king of renaming cities, roads, everything. It is th easiest way for politicians to show that something was done during their time. Most cities in Kerala were renamed, Bombay, Madras, Calcutta were renamed, now they are trying to rename Bangalore. There is no stopping them. After renaming the cities continue to be messed up and unable to provide basic living standards. Renaming twice - now that has not happened so far :-)

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            Nish Nishant
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            Vivek Rajan wrote:

            Most cities in Kerala were renamed

            Not most, all of them I guess. Regards, Nish

            My blog : Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET

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            • S SimonS

              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

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              Radoslav Bielik
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Many of the squares, streets, etc. were renamed here in Slovakia and Czech Republic after 1989, even some town names, but not much since. No wonder they renamed them, they had names such as Lenin's, Red Army streets, dozens of Soviet Generals' streets, etc. :) Rado


              Radoslav Bielik www.neomyz.com/poll [^] - Get your own web poll www.neomyz.com/rss [^] - RSS Web Reader - latest news for your site www.neomyz.com/games [^] - Add a small game to your website

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              • S SimonS

                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

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                malharone
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Bombay -> "Mumbai" Madaras -> Chennai They were planning on changing New Delhi to "Hastinapur" and Amadabad to "Karnavatinagar" If you think about it, it's all the same. The city object remains in the heap, it is just that the pointer variable in the stacktrace is different :laugh: - Malhar

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                • S SimonS

                  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

                  RaviBeeR Offline
                  RaviBeeR Offline
                  RaviBee
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  I think locations should be named using GUIDs. It's so much easier to remember (and index) 108b0750-82d6-11da-a72b-0800200c9a66 than Vatsala 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 the a6d09623-6d36-4302-9282-bb05fb6d415b in, sailed down the 4a320b25-c869-4442-b6c3-eec1bd443a5a, and went skiing in the 7717d6fc-48db-46d3-8bfd-f91ea39b913b."

                  /ravi My new year's resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Music | Articles | Freeware | Trips ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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                  • S SimonS

                    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

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                    peterchen
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    East Germany, after 'reunification' with West Germany. "Almost everything" (it must be above 50%) of streets, schools, named buildings, settlements and at least one major town were renamed - if available to the name it had before Commie or Nazi time. Mainly "unsuitable names" were removed, but there are many places where reason went overboard. For me, who grew up with other names, it is still confusing, I'm often actively "translating" to tne new name, as if it were a language used infrequently. Plus side: now many streets have a small sign telling a bit about the person they were named after.

                    SimonS wrote:

                    What about renaming twice in 10 years?

                    If you make it a regular event, it could attract some tourists. [edit] Interesting thread you started here [/edit]


                    We say "get a life" to each other, disappointed or jokingly. What we forget, though, is that this is possibly the most destructive advice you can give to a geek.
                    boost your code || Fold With Us! || sighist -- modified at 14:25 Wednesday 11th January, 2006

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                    • S SimonS

                      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

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                      Dan Neely
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      SimonS wrote:

                      Does renaming happen in other parts of the world?

                      *sung* Istanbul was Constantinople Now it's Istanbul not Constantinople :D

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                      • S SimonS

                        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

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                        Maximilien
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        It happens everywher, maybe not to the extent of renaming cities, but more often streets, parc, monuments or other landmarks. cities change name when something extraordinary happens ( end of USSR, end of apartheid, ... ) in the case of SA, I would assume that it was easier to just use a generic name at the beginning of the changes, and after a while, start using famous peoples names ( as a recognition ). as for the question if it's wise to spend money on that instead of other things, I would say, from an external point of view, that it's not well spent, at least not now ( IMO )


                        Maximilien Lincourt Your Head A Splode - Strong Bad

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                        • RaviBeeR RaviBee

                          I think locations should be named using GUIDs. It's so much easier to remember (and index) 108b0750-82d6-11da-a72b-0800200c9a66 than Vatsala 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 the a6d09623-6d36-4302-9282-bb05fb6d415b in, sailed down the 4a320b25-c869-4442-b6c3-eec1bd443a5a, and went skiing in the 7717d6fc-48db-46d3-8bfd-f91ea39b913b."

                          /ravi My new year's resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Music | Articles | Freeware | Trips ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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                          Adnan Siddiqi
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          not every person on earth is a geek ;P you prolly would comeup with some utility to map GUIDs with the orignal namees?

                          http://weblogs.com.pk/kadnan | kadnan.blogspot.com | AJAX based Contact Form for Blogger or any other website

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                          • RaviBeeR RaviBee

                            I think locations should be named using GUIDs. It's so much easier to remember (and index) 108b0750-82d6-11da-a72b-0800200c9a66 than Vatsala 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 the a6d09623-6d36-4302-9282-bb05fb6d415b in, sailed down the 4a320b25-c869-4442-b6c3-eec1bd443a5a, and went skiing in the 7717d6fc-48db-46d3-8bfd-f91ea39b913b."

                            /ravi My new year's resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Music | Articles | Freeware | Trips ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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                            Maximilien
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            :doh:


                            Maximilien Lincourt Your Head A Splode - Strong Bad

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                            • S Shog9 0

                              "Myanmar Shave"... just doesn't have the same ring, does it? :)

                              ---- Scripts i've known... CPhog 0.9.9 - make CP better. Forum Bookmark 0.2.1 - bookmark forum posts on Pensieve Print forum 0.1.2 - printer-friendly forums

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                              Gary R Wheeler
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              Careful Shog9; you're showing your age if you remember that one.


                              Software Zen: delete this;

                              Fold With Us![^]

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                              • S SimonS

                                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

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                                Gary R Wheeler
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                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;

                                Fold With Us![^]

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                                • S SimonS

                                  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

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                                  dandy72
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  Funny you should mention something like this today, although my take on this is (probably) a lot less significant than renaming a city... The Ottawa Senators[^] used to play at the Palladium. Pretty cool name. Then they renamed the building to "The Corel Centre" after Corel[^] (yes, that Corel) paid a few million dollars to have their name displayed in big fat letters on the building and on the ice (at a time when they were already bleeding cash). As of today the building is now known as the "Scotiabank Place". How exciting... :zzz: I'm not even a hockey fan. But this is sad.

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                                  • N Nish Nishant

                                    In Kerala (my state in India), they renamed a lot of cities back to their original Malayalam versions and it was a pain in the ass. For example, Trivandrum's official name is now Thiruvananthapuram (hope I spelled it right). Regards, Nish

                                    My blog : Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET

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                                    Farhan Noor Qureshi
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    Nishant Sivakumar wrote:

                                    Trivandrum's official name is now Thiruvananthapuram

                                    I am glad they did. Trivandrum is way easier than Thiruvananthapuram :-D Farhan Noor Qureshi if (this == this) thow this;

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                                    • S SimonS

                                      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

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                                      Giles
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      Its kind of stupid, as for many places that get renamed, they will suffer as tourists will not know the new names.


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                                      • G Gary R Wheeler

                                        Careful Shog9; you're showing your age if you remember that one.


                                        Software Zen: delete this;

                                        Fold With Us![^]

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                                        Shog9 0
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        :laugh: Sorry, i only know it from stories told by people older than me. And that Tom Waites song.

                                        ---- Scripts i've known... CPhog 0.9.9 - make CP better. Forum Bookmark 0.2.1 - bookmark forum posts on Pensieve Print forum 0.1.2 - printer-friendly forums

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                                        • G Gary R Wheeler

                                          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;

                                          Fold With Us![^]

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                                          Dan Neely
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                                          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.

                                          Which is older though, the local street names, or the route NN name? I assume the Korean vets segment is a recent rename, but what about the remainder? The non expressway versions generally started out as a mess of local roads and then had the route numbers added later to make nagigation easier for outsiders. The same thing would occur with 'normal' roads. The old wagon rut intersections were often messy and could resemble something like 2 Y's joined at the base or upright/inverted Ts joined at the crossbars and then subsequently rerouted to be square. Or each started out as seperate roads in seperate small towns(X and Y) with wagon ruts between the two that were either unnamed or just refered to as the road to X/road to Y depending on where you started from. Since rationalizing the mess is a major expense for the govt (steet signs, fights over which competing name to choose) and residents (mailbox markers, stationary, lost business from people confused by the rename, etc), it's generally only done for pressing reasons. Ie two Foo Streets is a potential source of confusion for EMS types. Slapping a US/State route NN overtop a long string of local roads that are generally traveled as a group is much less costly/objectionable since residents don't need to do anything and the route number is assigned based on geographic rules. (at least federal numbering is, not sure about state illogic)

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