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IHKM Interstate Highway Kilometer
The Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, commonly called the Interstate Highway System, is a network of highways (also called freeways or expressways) in the United States that is named for the president who was in office and championed its creation. The Interstate Highway System is a separate system within the larger National Highway System. The entire system, as of 2004, had a total length of 46,837 miles (75,376 km).

While Interstate highways usually receive substantial federal funding and comply with federal standards, they are owned, built, and operated by the states or toll authorities. The original Woodrow Wilson Bridge, part of Interstate 95 and Interstate 495, was maintained by the federal government; its new span is now jointly owned and maintained by the State of Maryland and the Commonwealth of Virginia.

The system serves nearly all major U.S. cities. Unlike counterparts in other industrialized countries , many Interstates pass through downtown areas. This has helped to facilitate the emergence of automobile-oriented postwar suburban development patterns, a phenomenon also known as urban sprawl.

The system is prominent in American daily life. The distribution of virtually all goods and services involves Interstate highways at some point. Residents of American cities commonly use urban Interstates to travel to their places of work. The vast majority of long-distance travel, whether for vacation or business, uses the national road network; of these trips, about one-third (by the total number of miles driven in the country in 2003) utilize the Interstate system.
History

The Interstate Highway System was authorized by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, popularly known as the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956. It had been lobbied for by major U.S. automobile manufacturers and championed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who was influenced by his experiences in 1919 as a young soldier crossing the country (following the route of the Lincoln Highway) and his appreciation of the German autobahn network as a necessary component of a national defense system. In addition to facilitating private and commercial transportation, it would provide key ground transport routes for military supplies and troop deployments in an emergency.

Initial federal planning for a nationwide highway system began in 1921 when the Bureau of Public Roads asked the Army to provide a list of roads it considered necessary for national defense, resulting in the Pershing Map. Later that decade, highways such as the New York parkway system had been built as part of local or state highway systems. As automobile traffic increased, planners saw a need for such an interconnected national system to supplement the existing, largely non-freeway, United States Numbered Highway system. By the late 1930s, planning had expanded to a system of new superhighways. In 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave BPR chief Thomas MacDonald a hand-drawn map of the U.S. marked with eight superhighway corridors for study. The publication General location of national system of interstate highways maps out what became the Interstate System, and is informally known as the Yellow Book. .

Although construction on the Interstate Highway System continues, the removal of the last traffic signal on Interstate 90 in Wallace, Idaho, on September 15, 1991 is often cited as the completion of the system. The initial cost estimate for the system was $25 billion over 12 years; it ended up costing $114 billion (adjusted for inflation, $425 billion in 2006 dollars and taking 35 years to complete.

Due to the cancellation of the Somerset Freeway, Interstate 95 is discontinuous in New Jersey. When the Pennsylvania Turnpike/Interstate 95 Interchange Project concludes in or around 2009, the last section of the original plan will be completed.

Missouri and Kansas have claimed that I-70 in those states was the first Interstate (Missouri also says I-44 is among the first). The first three contracts under the new program were signed in Missouri on August 2, 1956. Kansas claims that it was the first to start paving after the act was signed, and that the Kansas portion of I-70 was the first complete section. However, construction and planning on those roads had been underway before the highway act. The Pennsylvania Turnpike, which opened on October 1, 1940, claims to be the first limited-access, divided highway in the country.

[ Standards

M Interstate Highway standards

The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) has defined a set of standards that all new Interstates must meet unless a waiver from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) is obtained. These standards have become more strict over the years. One almost absolute standard is the controlled access nature of the roads. With few exceptions, traffic lights (and cross traffic in general) are limited to toll booths and ramp meters (metered flow control for lane merging during rush hour).

[ Speed limits

Further information: Speed limits in the United States

Interstate highways often have the highest speed limits in a given area. Speed limits are determined by individual states. Rural limits generally range from 65 to 85 mph (100 to 135 km/h) typically with the lower limits in the more populated northeastern states and the higher speeds in the western states , with the exception of Oregon's state speed limit ceiling of 65 mph. Urban Interstate speed limits are generally 50 to 65 mph (80.5 to 104.6 km/h) across the country.

[ Dual-purpose design

Further information: Contraflow lane reversal

In addition to being designed to support automobile and heavy truck traffic, Interstate highways are also designed for use in military and civil defense operations, particularly troop movements.

One potential civil defense use of the Interstate Highway System is for the emergency evacuation of cities in the event of a nuclear war. The system has already been used to facilitate evacuations in the face of hurricanes and other natural disasters.

An option for maximizing traffic throughput on a highway is to reverse the flow of traffic on one side of a divider so that all lanes become outbound lanes. This procedure, known as contraflow, was first employed on highway I-16 in the 1999 evacuation of Savannah, Georgia in anticipation of Hurricane Floyd. In 2004, contraflow was employed ahead of Hurricane Charley in the Tampa, Florida area and on the Gulf Coast before the landfall of Hurricane Ivan. It was again used in 2005 during the evacuations of New Orleans, Louisiana, and Houston, Texas, prior to hurricanes Katrina and Rita, respectively.

A widespread urban legend states that one out of every five or ten miles of the Interstate Highway System must be built straight and flat so as to be usable by aircraft during times of war. Contrary to popular lore, Interstate highways are not designed to serve as airstrips.

[ Terminology

While the name implies that Interstate highways cross state lines, many do not (for details see List of intrastate Interstates). Rather, they are funded federally with money shared among the states. There are Interstate highways in Hawaii, funded in the same way as in the other states, but entirely within the populous island of Oahu. They have the designation of H-x and connect military bases, though they are open to public use. Both Alaska and Puerto Rico have public roads that receive funding from the Interstate program, although these routes are not signed as Interstate highways (except on paper). These roads are neither planned for, nor built to, official Interstate highway standards.

[ Primary routes
Interstate highways are typically known as Interstate XX or I-XX, where "XX" is the one- or two-digit route number; sometimes Interstate Highway XX (IH XX) or Interstate Route XX (IR XX) is used. In some areas, the more generic Route XX or Highway XX is used, or in the case of Southern California and Nevada, The XX.

The numbering scheme for the Interstate Highway System (as well as the U.S. Highway System) was developed in 1957 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and is still coordinated by them, though their authority is occasionally trumped by a number written into federal law. Within the continental United States, primary Interstates (also called main line Interstates or two-digit Interstates) are given one- or two-digit route numbers. Most Interstates have two digits; there are only three one-digit Interstates in the system: I-4, I-5 and I-8.

Within this category, east/west highways are assigned even numbers, and north/south highways are assigned odd numbers. Odd route numbers increase from west to east, and even-numbered routes increase from south to north, though there are exceptions to both principles in several locations. Numbers divisible by 5 are intended to be major arteries among the primary routes, carrying traffic long distances. For example, along the west coast, I-5 runs between Canada and Mexico (the only Interstate to do so) while I-95 runs between Miami and Canada along the east coast. In addition, I-10 runs between Santa Monica, California and Jacksonville, Florida, while I-90 runs between Seattle and Boston. However, not all primary routes divisible by 5 traverse long distances. I-45 runs between Galveston, Texas and Dallas, a distance of only 284 miles (457 km). It is the only primary route divisible by 5 that does not cross state lines. See List of intrastate Interstate Highways for other primary routes that do not cross state lines.

I-50 and I-60 do not exist (and there are no even-numbered Interstates from 46 to 62), mainly because they would most likely have passed through the same states that already have US 50 and US 60. AASHTO rules discourage Interstate and U.S. highways having the same number within the same state, although I-24 and US 24 exist at opposite ends of Illinois. Some planned Interstates do not follow this guideline — I-69 will intersect US 69 in Lufkin, Texas , I-74 will overlap US 74 in North Carolina, and I-41 will do the same with US 41 in Wisconsin.

Several two-digit numbers are shared between two roads at opposite ends of the country, namely I-76, I-84, I-86 and I-88. Some of these were the result of a change in the numbering system in the 1970s; previously letter-suffixed numbers were used for long spurs off primary routes; for example, western I-84 was I-80N, as it went north from I-80. In the 1970s, AASHTO decided to eliminate these ; some became additional two-digit routes, while others became three-digit routes (see below). Only two pairs of these still exist: I-35 splits into I-35W and I-35E through both the Dallas-Fort Worth and the Minneapolis-St. Paul areas.

For the sake of efficiency, some Interstates coincide for various distances. This is usually referred to as a concurrency or overlap. One example is where I-75 and I-85 combine near downtown Atlanta to form the Downtown Connector, a major thoroughfare through the city. Another example is the merging and diverging of Interstates 90 and 94, which coincide and then separate several times across the upper Midwest and Great Plains. I-90 and I-94 even join with I-39 from Madison to Portage, Wisconsin, creating the longest triple concurrence in the Interstate Highway System.

Interstates 90 and 80 are concurrent for almost 280 miles in Indiana and Ohio. A recent addition is the I-73/I-74 concurrency, which runs along U.S. Route 220 between Asheboro and Rockingham, North Carolina. I-73 also will share routes with I-40 and I-85 on the Greensboro Urban Loop, a new bypass route around Greensboro, North Carolina. Strict adherence to the directional nature of the system results in some oddities. For a nine-mile (14 km) stretch east of Wytheville, Virginia, a driver can be traveling on both I-81 North and I-77 South at the same time (and vice versa) (see also wrong-way concurrency).

[ Auxiliary Interstates
Auxiliary Interstate highways are given three-digit route numbers, which consist of a single digit prefixed to the two-digit number of a primary Interstate highway, to designate spur or loop routes branching from either the primary route or one of its other auxiliary routes. A spur route is one that deviates from its parent and does not end at another Interstate (it is given an odd first digit); a loop route is one that returns to its parent (given an even first digit). The number given to the first digit of a route that branches from the parent to end at another Interstate depends on the state; some consider these routes spurs and assign odd first digits, while others consider them loop connectors and assign even first digits.

When letter-suffixed two-digit Interstates (see above) were abundant, their auxiliary routes were given a number without a letter suffix (with the exception of I-180N in Boise, Idaho, which is now Interstate 184).

Due to the large number of these routes, auxiliary route (a.k.a. "spur route") numbers may be repeated in different states along the mainline, but no two three-digit Interstates in the same state can share a number. For instance, I-90 in New York alone has a full set of three-digit Interstates: I-190, I-290, I-390, I-490, I-590, I-690, I-790, I-890 and I-990.

Closed loops usually retain a single designation for the entire route, even when they enter other states. For example, Cincinnati, like many other cities, features a large loop around the city that intersects with the primary routes I-71, I-74, and I-75 and travels through Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana. The entire 84 mile (135 km) loop is labeled I-275. (It is also the only three-digit Interstate that passes through three states, with the possible exception of I-495, which briefly enters the District of Columbia, which is not a state).

The loop highway around Washington, D.C., known as the Capital Beltway, carries both I-95 and I-495. Originally, the loop carried only I-495, in anticipation of I-95 being routed through Washington, but in 1977 , I-95 was rerouted on the eastern half of the loop due to the cancellation of the segment that would have connected downtown Washington to College Park, Maryland, while I-495 remained on the western half. I-495 was added back to the eastern half of the loop in 1989 , creating a rare concurrency of primary and auxiliary routes.

Unlike primary Interstates, three-digit Interstates are signed as either east/west or north/south, depending on the general orientation of the route, without regard to the route number. For some looped Interstate routes, Inner and Outer banners are used as a directional labeling system as opposed to compass directions.

There are, however, exceptions to these guidelines:

* A contiguous loop surrounds the entire Minneapolis-St. Paul Metro area. I-94 intersects the loop in two spots and runs directly through it separating it into southern and northern halves; the southern half of it is labeled I-494 while the northern half of it is labeled I-694. The northern half rejoins I-94 approximately five miles before the southern half does; this stretch is signed I-94/I-694.
* I-270 and I-255 form a beltway around the greater St. Louis area. On its southwest corner, I-270 becomes I-255 as it crosses I-55 counter-clockwise only to terminate back at I-270 in the northeast. In the early 1980s, local residents stopped a plan to designate the entire closed loop as I-270 and renumber the stub of I-270 from Glen Carbon to Edwardsville to Interstate 870.
* New York City has numerous spur routes from I-78 and I-95, but none of I-78's spur routes actually intersects with I-78. This is because I-78 was originally planned to continue east from its present terminus at the Holland Tunnel across Lower Manhattan, through Queens and across Long Island. This extension of I-78 was cancelled in the 1970s after I-278, I-478, I-678, and I-878 had already been established.
* An auxiliary route numbered I-238 connects San Leandro and Castro Valley, California, yet there is no I-38. Instead, I-238 carries the designation of the portion of State Route 238 that the Interstate designation replaced. I-238 could have been an auxiliary route of I-80, but at the time of I-238's designation, all child routes of I-80 (I-280 through I-980; I-180 was not used because of a Caltrans policy forbidding number duplications and the prior existence of State Route 180) were already designated in California.

[ Exceptions

A major exception to the overall numbering system is Interstate 99 in Pennsylvania, which was written into law as I-99 by Pennsylvania Congressman Bud Shuster; I-99 (which is also U.S. Route 220) is west of several Interstates that are numerically less than 99, but 99 was the nearest odd two-digit number available for the Interstate.

Other exceptions are I-82, which lies fully north of I-84 and is a relic from I-84 previously having the designation of I-80N; and I-39, which lies fully east of I-45 and I-49 but west of I-43

[ Other examples

The following two-digit Interstates change signed direction from their normal (even=east-west, odd=north-south) direction:

* I-69 east of Lansing, Michigan
* I-76 in Nebraska

The I-69 segment is an extension of its original route; I-76 only runs for two miles (3 km) in Nebraska before ending at I-80.

* I-64 east of Norfolk, Virginia after its intersection with I-264 becomes unsigned for directions as it loops around the southern side of Norfolk to the triple terminus of I-64, I-264, and I-664.

Two-digit Interstates in Hawaii, as well as the "paper" Interstates of Alaska and Puerto Rico, are numbered sequentially in order of funding, without regard to the rules on odd and even numbers.

Business Loop and Business Spur Interstates are not subject to any of the Interstate Highway standards. Their designation is simple: a business loop connects a downtown area with the parent route, while a business spur ends downtown (occasionally continuing from the end of the main Interstate). Business routes can split from either two- or three-digit Interstates, and can be repeated within a state. In a few cases, where an Interstate has been realigned, the old road has been designated a business loop because it is not up to standards.

[ Financing
About 56 percent of the construction and maintenance costs are funded through user fees, primarily gasoline taxes, collected by states and the federal government, and tolls collected on toll roads and bridges. The rest of the costs are borne by the federal budget. In the eastern United States, large sections of some Interstate highways planned or built prior to 1956 are operated as toll roads. The taxes dedicated to the construction and maintenance of highways are sometimes criticized as a direct subsidy from the government to promote and maintain automobile-oriented development.[attribution needed]

As American suburbs expand, the costs incurred in maintaining freeway infrastructure have grown, leaving little in the way of funds for new Interstate construction. This has led to the proliferation of toll roads (turnpikes) as the new method of building limited-access highways in suburban areas. Also, some Interstates are being privately maintained (e.g., VMS maintains I-35 in Texas ) to meet rising costs of maintenance and allow state departments of transportation to focus on serving the fastest growing regions in their respective states.

It is possible that parts of the system will have to be tolled in the future to meet maintenance and expansion demands, as has been done with adding toll HOV/HOT lanes in certain cities such as San Diego, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta and Washington, D.C.

[ The federal role in financing

The dominant role of the federal government in road finance has enabled it to achieve legislative goals that fall outside its power to regulate interstate commerce as enumerated in the federal Constitution. By threatening to withhold highway funds, the federal government has been able to stimulate state legislatures to pass a variety of laws. Although some object on the ground that this infringes on states' rights[attribution needed], the Supreme Court has upheld the practice as a permissible use of the Constitution's Commerce Clause.

The first major example was the introduction of the 55 mph (90 km/h) national speed limit in 1974. While its purpose was to save fuel in the wake of the 1973 energy crisis, federal speed controls stayed in effect for 21 years. The initial acceptance of the national speed limit emboldened various presidents and congresses to enact additional pieces of legislation, some of which have little to do with highways or transportation. Examples include:

* Increasing the legal drinking age to 21.
* Megan's Law legislation, requiring states to disclose identities of sex offenders.
* Lowering the legal intoxication level to 0.08%.
* Requiring the use of carpool (HOV) lanes.

States also must meet minimum enforcement standards for all federally-mandated legislation (for example, minimum penalties for violation of these laws and a minimum number of per capita underage drinking convictions or a compelling explanation regarding why this number is not met). This has proved to be controversial. Supporters hold that it is a way to provide an impetus to states to pass uniform legislation.[attribution needed] Critics maintain that using highway dollars in this fashion upsets the balance between federal and states rights in favor of the federal government, and effectively withholds funds to leverage state governments into passing laws that would not have otherwise been introduced.[attribution needed] Some have even argued that the current arrangement is unconstitutional.[attribution needed] Law enforcement agencies in some states argue that efforts to meet quotas for underage drinking convictions have distracted them from other matters and strained relations with those under 21.[attribution needed] Any state that was to lose federal highway funding would quickly face deteriorating infrastructure, fiscal impoverishment, or both.

However, a state that lost federal highway funding could theoretically threaten to stop maintaining its highways, if that were politically palatable to its residents.

[ Local maintenance

A few Interstates are maintained by local authorities:

* Baltimore, Maryland: Interstate 70 and Interstate 83 in the city limits
* New York City: Small portions of Interstate 278
* Washington, D.C.: As the city and District are identical, the District maintains the portions of Interstate 66, Interstate 295, Interstate 395 and Interstate 695 inside the city.

[ Chargeable and non-chargeable Interstate routes

Interstate highways financed with federal funds are known as "chargeable" Interstate routes, and are considered part of the 42,000 mile network of highways. Federal laws allow highways funded similarly to state and US highways to be signed as Interstates, if they meet the Interstate highway standards and are logical additions or connections to the System.

Called "non-chargeable" Interstate routes, these additions fall under two categories:

1. Routes that already meet Interstate standards. These may immediately be signed as Interstates once their proposed number is approved, or may be retained with a non-Interstate designation.
2. Routes not yet upgraded to Interstate standards. These cannot be signed as Interstates until they have been fully upgraded.

[ Signage

The majority of Interstates have exit numbers. All traffic signs and lane markings on the Interstates are supposed to be designed in compliance with the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD). However, there are many local and regional variations in signage.

For many years, California was the only state that did not use an exit numbering system. It was granted an exemption in the 1950s due to having an already largely completed and signed highway system; at the time, placing exit number signage across the state was deemed too expensive. Since 2002, however, California has begun to incorporate exit numbers on all its freeways - Interstate, U.S., and state routes alike. To mitigate costs, a common occurrence is for Caltrans to install exit number signage only when a freeway or interchange is built, reconstructed, retrofitted, or repaired. The majority of the exits along Interstates 5, 10, and 80 now have exit number signage, particularly in rural areas.

In most states, the exit numbers correspond to the mileage markers on the Interstates (with an exception being I-19 in Arizona, whose length is measured in kilometers instead of miles). On even-numbered Interstates, mileage count increases to the east and decreases to the west (except on the I-90 portion of the New York State Thruway, I-90 between Chicago and Rockford, IL, the I-190 spur into O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, and the portion of I-76 in New Jersey, all of which count up going west); and on odd-numbered Interstates, mileage count increases to the north and decreases to the south and the exit numbers increase and decrease accordingly.

Many northeastern states label exit numbers sequentially, regardless of how many miles have passed between exits. States in which Interstate exits are still numbered sequentially are Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont. Maine, Virginia, Georgia, and Florida followed this system for a number of years, but recently converted to having the exit numbers correspond to mileage markers. The Pennsylvania Turnpike uses both the mile marker number and the sequential number. The mile marker number is used for signage, while the sequential number is used for numbering interchanges internally. The New Jersey Turnpike also has sequential numbering, but other Interstates within New Jersey generally use mile markers.

[ Interstate shield

Interstate Highways are signed by a number placed on a trademarked red, white and blue sign as shown to the right. In the original design, the state was listed above the highway number, but in many states, this area is now left blank. The sign usually measures 36-in (91 cm) high, and is 36-in wide for two-digit Interstates or 45-in (114 cm) for three-digit Interstates.

Interstate business loops and spurs use a special shield where the red and blue are replaced with green, the word BUSINESS appears instead of INTERSTATE, and the word SPUR or LOOP usually appears above the number.

Over time the design of the Interstate shield has changed. In 1958, when the Interstate shield was introduced, the shield color was a dark navy blue and only 17-in (41 cm) wide. The MUTCD standards made a few revisions to the shield in the 1961, 1972, 1988, and 2000 editions. By 2000, the shield size nearly doubled, with some Interstate shields reaching 36-in in diameter.

[ Extremes

The most heavily traveled area of the Interstate Highway System is the 405 Freeway in Los Angeles, California, with a 2005 estimate of 382,000 vehicles a day. The least traveled section is Interstate 95 just north of Houlton, Maine (near the Canadian border), with 1,880 vehicles a day (2001 estimate).

The most extreme directional points of the Interstate Highway system are:

* Northernmost: The northern termini of Interstates 5, 15, and 29, crossing the Canadian border at the 49th parallel near, respectively, Blaine, Washington, Sweetgrass, Montana, and Pembina, North Dakota.
* Southernmost: A bend on Interstate H-1 in the Kaimuki section of Honolulu, Hawaii, less than half a mile (0.8 km) before its eastern terminus (lat. 21.3 deg. N.). The southernmost point in the 48 contiguous states is the southern terminus of Interstate 95 in Miami, Florida (lat. 25.8 deg. N.).
* Easternmost: The northern terminus of Interstate 95 near Houlton, Maine, at the border of New Brunswick in Canada (long. 67.8 deg. W.).
* Westernmost: The western terminus of Interstate H-1 in Kapolei, Hawaii (long. 158.06 deg. W.). The westernmost point in the contiguous states is a curve on Interstate 5 near Wolf Creek, Oregon (long. 123.23 deg. W.).

The highest point on the Interstate Highway System is at the Eisenhower Tunnel on Interstate 70 in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, at the Continental Divide (elev. 11,158 feet (3401 m)). The lowest point on land is on Interstate 8 at the New River near Seeley, California (elev. -52 feet (-16 m)). The lowest point under water is on Interstate 95 in the Fort McHenry Tunnel under Baltimore Harbor in Baltimore, Maryland (elev. -107 feet (-32 m)).

The longest Interstate highway is Interstate 90, which runs 3099 miles (4 987 km) between Boston, Massachusetts and Seattle, Washington. The longest north-south Interstate highway is generally cited as Interstate 95; when completed, it will run 1927 mi (3 101 km) between Miami, Florida and the Canadian border (there is a gap in New Jersey). The shortest, albeit unsigned, Interstate is Interstate 878, a 0.7-mile (1.1 km) portion of New York State Route 878 adjacent to John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens, New York. Another short unsigned Interstate is Interstate 110 near downtown El Paso, with length of 0.92 miles (1.5 km). The shortest signed Interstate is Interstate 375 in downtown Detroit, Michigan, at 1.06 miles (1.71 km).

A kilometre (American spelling: kilometer, symbol km) is a unit of length in the metric system, equal to one thousand metres, the current SI base unit of length. It can be written in scientific notations as 1×103 m (engineering notation) or 1 E+3 m (exponential notation) — both meaning 1,000 × 1 m.

nanometre <<< micrometre <<< millimetre < centimetre < decimetre < metre < decametre < hectometre < kilometre <<< megametre

A corresponding unit of area is the square kilometre and a corresponding unit of volume is the cubic kilometre.

Although, in English, metric units of measurement are usually pronounced with the stress on the first syllable, as in /?k?l.??mi?.t?(r)/, pronunciation of the word "kilometre" with the stress on the second syllable /k??l?m.?.t?(r)/ is in common usage (see List of words of disputed pronunciation). The latter pronunciation follows the stress pattern used for the names of measuring instruments, such as barometer, thermometer, tachometer and speedometer. This stress pattern is not commonly used for other metric measurements such as millimetre or centimetre.

Slang terms for kilometre include "klick" (sometimes spelled "click" or "klik") and "kay" (or "k"). These non-standard terms can also refer to kilometres per hour, which itself is abbreviated as km/h, km h-1, km·h-1 or, informally, kph.

"Kilometrage" may be used in the same way as "mileage".
[ Equivalence to other units of length

1 kilometre is equal to:

* 1,000 metres (1 metre is equal to 0.001 kilometres)
* about 0.621 statute miles (1 statute mile is equal to 1.609344 kilometres)
* about 1,094 international yards (1 international yard is equal to 0.0009144 kilometres)
* about 3,281 feet (1 foot is equal to 0.0003048 kilometres)

[ International usage

The United States of America and the United Kingdom are the only two developed countries that have not changed their road signs from miles to kilometres.

Although the UK has officially adopted the metric system, there is no intention to replace the mile on road signs in the near future, owing to the British public's attachment to traditional imperial units of distance, i.e., miles, yards and inches. As of 11 September 2007, the EU has allowed Britain to continue using the imperial systems. EU commissioner Günter Verheugen said: "There is not now and never will be any requirement to drop imperial measurements."

In the US, the National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 prohibits the use of federal-aid highway funds to convert existing signs or purchase new signs with metric units. However, the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices since 2000 published in both metric and American Customary Units. (See also Metrication in the United States.)

Unicode symbols

For the purposes of compatibility with Chinese, Japanese and Korean (CJK) characters, Unicode has symbols for:

* kilometre (㎞) - code 339E
* square kilometre (?) - code 33A2
* cubic kilometre (?) - code 33A6
 

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RuneScape is a virtual world which is divided into two part: Members Areas and Non-Members areas. People who pay to play (p2p), receive access to the special areas. They also have access to the free areas. The members' places are much larger, offer "better" items for the gameplay of rs2, and much, much more. The character that you create when you first start playing runescape, moves around the game on foot; either by running, or walking. Players are challenged to their utmost skills by fighting new monsters, completing difficult quests, and manipulating marketing. As Runescape 2 is an RPG (Role playing game), there is no set path a person must take to play rs. They can choose what to do, and when, whether it be training their money-making skills, or fighting another player. Players usually interact with each other by chatting through public chat, or private chat.Internet Junction For Gamers, Runescape Market and More IJFG.COM IJFG.com was a runescape 2 based site. They have now, however, taken another look....

Of course the king of all game cheating websites is trick the trik (otherwise known as RPG Cheats Site), where you can find cheat forums, mmorpg topsite, arcade games and any mmo game related topics.

The master of massive multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPG) cheats can be found at Trik.com Trik.com; this site is one of the best today. The forum section, Trik.com forum, originally came from IJFG.com (Internet Junction For Gamers) , which was one of the best websites that discussed various gamers' issues. The full name was Internet Junction For Gamers, Runescape Market and More. This site had Jokes, Pranks, RuneScape and other cool games. RuneScape is set in a medieval fantasy world, similar to "Guild Wars" or "EverQuest," where players control character representations of themselves. As with most MMORPG, there is no overall objective or end to the game. Players explore, form alliances, perform optional tasks, and complete quests for rewards and to build characters' skills.

Trik.com continues IJFG.com's success, but Trik.com has more to offer. Trik Topsite can be found at Trik Topsite; the TopSite is a great addition if you want to find the best MMO RPG site(s) or raise your site in the rankings. Trik.com also has a viciously competitive Arcade. If you want to be the #1 Arcade on Trik, then come prove yourself at Trik.com arcade: Trik arcade.  Trik.com – Trik.com/topsite – Trik.com/forum/arcade.php

With the rising popularity of commercial MMORPG games came the desire from ardent players of these games to run their own servers beside the ones run by the game's creator. Since the original server software is not usually available, the behavior of the server has to be re-engineered. This can be done by analyzing the data stream with the original server, or by disassembling and analyzing the client which is available.

Ultima Online was one of the first large MMORPGs. Due to its openness in implementation, server emulators arose very quickly, even during the beta stage of development. The destination to which the client connects was changeable by simply editing a text file. In beta stage the client-server data stream was not encrypted yet. The term server emulator became known through Ultima Online server reimplementation such as UOX, which was the pioneer. Many forks and reimplementations followed UOX, because its source code was released under the GNU General Public License relatively early. RunUO is today the most widely used UO-server emulator. After RuneScape implemented anti-cheating measures, many gamers left and started their own private servers. The best place to discuss the private server is at Trik- The Master of Private Server.
 

Another useful site is Rune Web ruwb.com . This site is about more serious RuneScape gold trading, account exchange, gold for real life cash and many services. It includes tips on how to avoid getting lured/scammed while using the marketplace. For programming, visual basics, java, C/C++, scar and all other languages such as PHP, HTML, ASP, Delphi. There are also sections for graphics talents, plus many cool videos and fun stuff.

A defining moment in internet gaming history was when a group of gamers called (hygo 7) decided to start an ultimate game forum, which they named hygo.com. It has the best financial backing, the friendliest game community, and the highest quality of information. Currently Hygo.com has entered a new phase...Hygo.com is offering the best private server game. With thousands of members, Hygo.com is your next place to visit, as they have an amazing game with a community and economy. Hygo.com - The Online Adventure Game. is definitely one of the top sites you want to join right now!

 

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