Archive for the ‘cycling’ Category

VW folding electric bike — WIN!

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

This electric bike has a 12.5-mile range and is designed to fold up into a package small enough to fit in a car’s spare-tire well.  Also, it can be charged directly from the host vehicle’s systems.  It’s wonderful, but where does the spare tire go?

I’m going to have to make my own electric bike one of these days.  The concept is just too compelling.

Discovered via Core 77.  Follow the link or click on the image to read the post and watch a video of the bike in action.  Well, if an old guy in a suit riding around a car-show stage counts as “action”.

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Hal Grades Your Bike Locking (a classic)

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Here’s Hal Ruzal, career bike mechanic for Bicycle Habitat in New York, doling out grades for different bike locking methods.  This is a 2003 video, but there have been two sequels made in the interim.  Hal mentions that people actually recognize him from the videos, yet somehow seem to have learned little from his advice.  Part one is embedded here as a YouTube video, but the higher-quality original and the sequels are available here, here, and here.

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Core 77 Roundup

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Here’s a hubless bicycle wheel design by some Yale students.  It sounds like it was sort of a time-killing project, but it’s still kind of a cool concept.  I’m not sure what the practical advantages are, though.  One of the students mentioned that the open space created opportunities for things like electric motors and gyroscopically-stabilized baskets, although I’m skeptical.  I’ve never looked at a spoked wheel end thought “Jeez, look at all that wasted space.”  I suppose there would be opportunities for a folding bike to actually pretzel (as long as the wheels were different sizes), rather than simply scissor closed.  I really wonder about the weight and drag a wheel like that would generate.  The frame they’ve attached it to looks heavy as hell.  Also, the drive gear is offset from the pedal crankset, meaning there’s some sort of power-transfer mechanism creating even more drag.  And it’s obviously a fixie.

This is an interesting idea — “skin-on-bone” motorcycle helmets.  The concept is based on the rotational forces experienced by the helmet (and, by extension, the rider’s melon inside) upon impact.  The “skin” is able to stretch and move over the rigid shell, sliding on a layer of gel lubricant, dissipating the rotational force.  Neat!  Depending on what the gel looks like when it comes oozing out, I bet there are going to be more than a couple of freaked out EMT’s who encounter one of these helmets at an accident scene.

Outlet/USB-charger combo.  This would be ideal for public places, particularly airports.  I can’t see making much of an investment in home installation, though.  There’s a lot of focus on developing better ways to charge small electronics and the trend seems to be toward wireless charging.  I’m reminded of the engineers I knew who ran cat-5 throughout their homes and installed network drops in every room, only to see cheap wireless networking hit the market a year or two later.

I’m not sure why this made it onto an industrial design blog, but here’s the “Bacon Cheeseturtle” (which must be why they resorted to the term “biomimetics” as justification).  It’s essentially a cheeseburger with a shell made of basket-weave bacon and a head and legs made of hot dogs.  I generally avoid the whole bacon meme, but this is so obscenely weird that even as a vegetarian I have to admire it.  It’s not industrial, but it is design (albeit a perverse one).  I’m reminded of Cyanide and Happiness’s “Animal Hater’s” pizza from the last Webcomic Wednesday.  Click on the images for the full-sized versions.

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Dubious cycling innovations

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

sushi

Here are a couple of cycling innovations I’m both impressed by and afraid of, via Core 77.  First, the flat-pack cycling helmet.  Neat idea, but does it go flat when, say, it’s full of human head and strikes a curb?  I’m one of those irresponsible cyclists who has to be guilted into wearing a helmet in the first place, and it’s bad enough knowing my tires can go flat at any moment, let alone my brain bucket.

Next is an elevated bike lane/zip line concept (click for pics).  The advantages are obvious, but so are the disadvantages, especially if you fall wearing a flat-pack helmet that shatters like an eggshell when it impacts a car’s roof.  One of the less obvious advantages: The opportunity for an aerial assault upon jerky motorists.  U-lock justice — from the skies!

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My kind of trash service

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Image from the Pedal People image gallery

Image from the Pedal People image gallery

DailyKOS has published an interview with the Pedal People cooperative of Northampton, Massachusetts, who run a residential trash hauling service using bicycles and trailers.  They also have a city contract to collect the downtown garbage.  This is great, but the amazing part is that they do this year-round.  The KOS interview is here and the Pedal People’s site is here.

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Core 77 roundup

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Three more good ones from Core 77.

First, here are some more pictures of Kevin Cyr’s awesome Camper Bike and another interesting, yet very dangerous-looking variant, the Camper Kart.  I love all things cycling and have been fascinated by the ways design can be applied to portable shelters for years, now.  The bike is utterly practical (albeit heavy-looking), but the Kart is a different story — that ain’t gonna work.  I actually designed several forms of cart-based portable shelters for a homeless-shelter competition on Design Boom a few years ago.  Look at the structural underpinnings of the Kart — all it takes is one MD20/20-induced night terror and that thing’s falling over.  I suspect the Kart is really more about art than function, though.

Next, a “Creative Commons”-inspired swap meet in Turin.  The idea is that participants exchange unwanted physical goods for other physical goods or services and that actually currency is verboten.  Although it smacks more than a little of fruity utopianism, I do like how much it reminds me of the alternative societies and interstitial communities in the fiction of William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, and (to a lesser extent) Cory Doctorow.  If you’re in a book-buying mood, click here (wink, nudge).

Finally, an apparatus to hide your flatscreen TV under your bed.  There are a few things wrong with this idea, but I’ll start with the amount of dust, lint, hair, dead skin flakes, and everything that accumulates under a bed.  Guess what that that does to electronics?  Next, it’s creepy as hell.  Watch the video, then imagine the dialogue one might attribute to the TV.  It rises from the foot of the bed like the Ghost of Christmas Future, then hovers there like an electronic voyeur.  You can almost hear Joey Tribbiani saying “How you doin’?”  Then it turns slightly to the side, as if to wink over its shoulder.  The late-1980’s soft-core soundtrack absolutely does not help this impression.

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Elsewhere on the interwebs…

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

The Consumerist:

  • The Dahn Yoga chain is being sued by former employees claiming it’s really big scam/cult, alleging physical abuse, pressure to take out student loans and turn the cash over to the chain, dangerous diets, and advertising bogus cures for things like autism.
  • Facebook is blocking traffic from the Suicide Machine, claiming it violates terms of service by harvesting login information and scraping members’ pages.  This sounds pretty flimsy to me.

i09:

Boing Boing:

And finally, Fark: Top headlines of 2009.  I realize this has already been posted to death, but here it is again.

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U-Lock Justice is clearly called for

Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Thats a guy u-locked to a parking meter, hence the original term.

That's a guy U-locked to a parking meter, hence the original term.

Boing Boing has a follow-up on a San Francisco cyclist who was nearly run down by a deranged driver.  His friend was hit.  The driver was confronted and her license plate photographed, but the SFPD is basically ignoring the case.

Another officer complained that bicyclists should be ticketed a lot more, then he said that he thought San Francisco bicyclists should all be moved to Treasure Island, where presumably they wouldn’t be in the way. [...] When it dawned on him that his bigotry might make it into my story, given the bright pink SFPD press badge dangling around my neck, he made a slightly menacing reference to memorizing the information on my pass.

I haven’t mentioned much about cycling on the blog yet, but I’m a pretty avid cyclist and also do a fair bit of bike repair and restoration.  I’m not a pro, but I do own a Park Tools repair stand, fourth-hand tool, and two different kinds of chain-breakers.  I also have about fifteen vintage bikes (Wanna buy a bike?) in various stages of repair.  What I’m getting at is that I’m pretty serious about the cycling thing.

I’m in the same mode when I’m driving.  My poor, beleaguered kid has had to listen to me rant about other drivers who ignore cyclists and pedestrians.  While cycling I’ve been hit by a car (once) and menaced by drivers (many times) and I have absolutely zero fucking control under those circumstances.  I will do my best to catch up with the driver, but have yet to catch any of them.  If it ever happens I’ll probably spend (at least) the night in jail.

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