@OL:
Ah, I remember the days of living in a city with limited parking...
Strangely, I don't see a lot of that happening in Toronto. Maybe because it's a big cycling town? (Maybe because Canadians are just more polite?)
I don't want to discount the natural politeness of Canadians, but I believe there is one other big variable in play: how good is the city's snow removal?
I'm guessing that snow removal in Toronto is pretty good, since (a) it snows a lot in Toronto and (b) Rob Ford strikes me as an on-the-ball kinda guy who wouldn't let that sort of thing slide.
In Boston, municipal snow removal is gawdawful, despite the fact that, you know, it snows here all the freaking time, so maybe we should have seen this coming by now?
The space saver as a cultural phenomenon is inextricably linked with snowstorms. Whenever the forecast calls for more than a few inches of snow, you see people start to stick their space savers out in front of their apartments. Then, after the snow finishes, they shovel out the parking space they saved, and put the space saver back in the now-shoveled space. It has been explained to me by native Bostonians that moving someone else's space saver to park in their spot is akin to relieving yourself on their mother's grave, and that socially acceptable retaliation includes keying the car or letting the air out of the tires.
Now, as a Midwestern transplant who grew up in a place with good snow removal and Canadian-esque levels of politeness, this phenomenon blew my mind. I had to have the locals explain it to me.
Me: But wait, it's a public street. How can you "save" a parking space on a public street?
Local: Easy. I put a folding chair in it.
Me: Well, sure, that's *how* you do it. But, I mean, what gives you the right?
Local: Hey, I shoveled that space out. Why should someone else get to park there? I should get to park there.
Me: But obviously you weren't parked there, since you left a folding lawn chair in place of your car.
Local: Sure. But I might want to park there later.
Me: Isn't it harder to plow the streets if they're full of folding chairs?
Local: Sure, I guess.
Me: This can't be legal.
Local: Well, not technically, no. But everyone knows how it works.
Me: Why don't the police just remove the space savers?
Local: Are you kiidding? The police know how this works.
Me: There are some things I will just never understand.
Local: Have fun back in flyover country, then.
Actually maybe we should talk about coordinating when stuff goes up for vote a bit better. Maybe a limit of works per week? Would that be feasible or would we end up with a bunch of stuff waiting in the queue? I think we've had a few slower weeks that could balance out weeks like this when there's a whole bunch of stuff up...
My concern about having a limit is that we'd have people racing to get their stuff up as fast as possible in order to claim the spots, which would lead to active threads getting buried beneath the next week's threads.
I think we can just use the shop talk thread here to coordinate as needed. If people have a lot of content, or really big content, which is in the pipeline, they can just give people a heads-up, and hopefully we can coordinate everything on an ad-hoc basis.
Similarly, I wonder if it makes sense to sticky the active voting threads each week, so that they stay at the top of the forum?