Rise and Shine is a regular morning roundup of links. Tips if you’ve got ‘em.
- Food trucks are getting together in an Albuquerque park and offering customers free movies. Too many people are coming.
- Knoxville, meanwhile, is gathering to rethink its own food truck limits.
- “I Work for Citibike:” a detail-rich Reddit AMA thread on the New York City program’s inside operations. A taste: there’s talk of emulating Paris’s bonus points for better bike distribution.
- The Pulley Collective is a shared Brooklyn coffee roasting space that significantly lowers the cost of entry — and makes roasting the beans less of a “lonely business.” (via @jasonschupbach)
- The California Public Utilities Commission suggests to Los Angeles that “transportation network companies” are the state’s problem, and it doesn’t have a problem with them. (Here’s the existing operating agreement between the PUC and one such TNC, Uber.)
- Are “unregulated beds” costing Spain mucho tax dollars?
- The “sharing economy” writ small: Slate editor David Plotz notes that his family shares a minivan with that of the New York Times’ Mark Leibovich.
- San Francisco is inviting folks to come together and hack its soon-to-be-released city code.
- You drive to the airport and leave your car. And while you’re gone, it works for you.
- Calling themselves “longtime fans of the handmade movement,” the Williams-Sonoma-owned furniture chain West Elm is hosting local Etsy seller pop-ups all over the place.
- EatWith is where you go if you’re willing to cook dinner for traveling strangers.
- #VizLou is Louisville’s attempt to connect the mobile young to the city.
- This is a company whose business plan consists of setting up Airbnb hosts with welcome kits for their guest-renters.
- In an attempt to appeal to tech-savvy locals, the 49ers’s new stadium will feature an app that tells game-goers which beer lines are the shortest.
- Finding that perfect Airbnb rental is a big data challenge.
- San Diego’s allegedly lewd and lascivious Mayor Bob Filner as an explanation for why women-only coworking spaces make sense.
- The shuttered NeighborGoods has been acquired, but details are scarce.
- One British peer-to-peer economy expert says that the U.K. is about a year behind.
- And Traverse City, Michigan, is having a meeting to explain to residents how open government works.
Nancy Scola is a Washington, DC-based journalist whose work tends to focus on the intersections of technology, politics, and public policy. Shortly after returning from Havana she started as a tech reporter at POLITICO.