MIT Elevators: Difference between revisions
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= Building 16 -- Thursday 15 June 2006 = | = Building 16 -- Thursday 15 June 2006 = | ||
The left elevator in building 16 has been out of service for 2 days. | |||
= Building 56 -- Thursday 15 June 2006 = | |||
The left elevator in building 56 has been out of service for 2 days. | The left elevator in building 56 has been out of service for 2 days. | ||
= Building | = Building 66 -- Thursday 15 June 2006 = | ||
The left elevator in building | The left elevator in building 66 has been out of service for 1 day. | ||
= External Links = | = External Links = | ||
[http://www.merl.com/papers/docs/TR2004-148.pdf Optimal calculation and control of elevator wait time distributions] | [http://www.merl.com/papers/docs/TR2004-148.pdf Optimal calculation and control of elevator wait time distributions] |
Revision as of 06:43, 16 June 2006
Elevators are often devices which lift and lower passengers from one floor of a building to another. At MIT, however, elevators sometimes transform into inert assemblies of cable and steel, whose job seems to be sitting motionless in elevator shafts for extended periods.
The purpose of this page is to log the downtime of MIT's elevators.
Building 16 -- Thursday 15 June 2006
The left elevator in building 16 has been out of service for 2 days.
Building 56 -- Thursday 15 June 2006
The left elevator in building 56 has been out of service for 2 days.
Building 66 -- Thursday 15 June 2006
The left elevator in building 66 has been out of service for 1 day.
External Links
Optimal calculation and control of elevator wait time distributions