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<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:trevorspoke@cox.net">trevorspoke@cox.net</a> wrote:
<blockquote cite="mid20071105055530.UBWIV.117290.root@fed1wml17"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">I have been thinking about this problem, and my solution is to project the sign onto the roadway from overhead, where the placement of the hanger (if one is not already convenient) can be well out of the roadway, and the sign itself can be placed more usefully in front of affected traffic lanes without itself being an obstruction. Low-tech solution could be just to hang a sign overhead, but there are bigger plans for what you could do if you always had traffic engineering projection systems. Imagine virtual stripes, for example; or virtual bicyclists.
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<small><font face="Verdana">You've got a beautiful theory, Trevor, but
considering what I have personally witnessed, it doesn't matter where
construction signs are placed because most motorists' are too
inattentive/distracted to see *anything* that isn't rumbling under
their front tires or caught in their front bumper. </font></small><br>
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