World: r3wp
[Tech News] Interesting technology
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Gabriele 13-Aug-2009 [4203] | I wish MS would become against software patents just because of this... and then we finally get rid of them. ;) (or, make them work correctly - patent lasts 5 years, MUST include working source code, and when patent expires that source code becomes "free") |
Anton 13-Aug-2009 [4204] | I suspect this case might have been set up by Microsoft, to justify changing format of their docs. Surely if MS wanted to win this one they could have. |
Pekr 13-Aug-2009 [4205] | ... a conspiracy theory? :-) |
Anton 13-Aug-2009 [4206] | A conspiracy theory. |
Will 17-Aug-2009 [4207] | Catch it 8) , twitter's rebol news http://toriseye.quodis.com/#rebol |
Graham 2-Sep-2009 [4208x2] | http://www.yikebike.com/ expensive bikes ! |
can a bike be called "revolutionary" ?? | |
Will 2-Sep-2009 [4210] | Lovely! 8)) |
Henrik 2-Sep-2009 [4211] | yeah. what happens if you have to brake hard? |
Graham 2-Sep-2009 [4212] | See the FAQ |
Sunanda 2-Sep-2009 [4213] | Intertesting idea -- hope it succeeds, and the price drops by an order of magnitude! Max speed is stated as 20KPH -- not a very high speed for a bicycle. So hard braking unlikely to be a problem. Needing to use a backpack (no attachable panniers) will be a drawback for commuters / shoppers. |
Izkata 2-Sep-2009 [4214] | Interesting looking, but their FAQ is a bit off in at least one place: 20 KPH (about 12 MPH) might be slow, but it is fast enough for wind resistance to become an issue because your entire torso is spread sitting up, making it catch much more air. Also, since sitting up gives you a higher center of gravity than leaning forward as on a normal bike, it seems less stable to me... Then again, I rollerblade rather than bike, so I don't know much about the Center of Gravity on bikes, but my wind resistance comment comes from leaning forward at around 15 MPH and still having issues with the wind throwing my balance. |
Graham 2-Sep-2009 [4215x2] | Nothing to stop you from curling up .... but this mode of transport seems designed for urban use. |
BTW, I think "yike" is short for "Yikes!!" which is what you say when you see the price :) | |
Reichart 2-Sep-2009 [4217] | ..............uh.............. so who exactly is this bike for... Have any of you been OUTISDE and looked around? http://www.thegiantnapkin.com/images/fatpeople walking.jpg |
Graham 2-Sep-2009 [4218x2] | It's priced in Euros ... let me see ... where do they use Euros ? |
Looks like they'll also be sellng in NZ too. I wonder if my dog would mind if I used a NZ$7000 bike to '"walk" him ... | |
Henrik 3-Sep-2009 [4220] | so it's the beginning of how people end up in Wall-E. |
Chris 3-Sep-2009 [4221] | I guess on the one hand, it's a replacement for scooters - they look nimble and the fold-up feature is convenient (no parking!). As a cyclist, I appreciate the exercise, but sometimes miss the convenience of being lazy - I'd give it a try as a backup, but I think in the 'States a scooter offers more range, versatility and presence... |
Pekr 4-Sep-2009 [4222] | This device will be never successful, and is even dangerous. Normally, when you drive, you have your hands in front of you, not behind of you. When there will be any road-block in front of you, you will reflectively put your hands in front of you, to cover your head, body, whatever. This is really only a jewelery, not a real bike .... |
Sunanda 4-Sep-2009 [4223] | Having read the FAQ now, this looks critical: <Currently the YikeBike can travel a distance of 9 - 10 Km.> That's way too short to be of use to many people. |
Geomol 4-Sep-2009 [4224x2] | Making it really a urban city transport. How far can the Segway travel? |
Did you notice the Green slogan? How does it gets its power? ;-) | |
Henrik 4-Sep-2009 [4226] | I'm not so worried about travel distance for most electric vehicles. The cool thing is that it won't take much to replace the batteries with better ones eventually. The motor remains the same. With the development of graphene batteries, it sounds like we can increase battery life to at least twice as much, perhaps 4 times. |
Sunanda 4-Sep-2009 [4227] | I am an urban city bicycle commuter. I'd need a minimum range of 15Km a day. And I'd want 30km for flexibility. Also, I suspect the range is dependent on the weather [FAQ says <the YikeBike works best in mild climates>] so the actual range would be less than the quoted 9-10km for anyone outside of summer conditions. That's one of the issues that sunk the Sinclar C5. Power ..... The FAQ implies it is powered from the electicity mains. Average cost EUR0.10 per recharge. Now, if you could set it up as a static bike and recharge it by pedalling.... |
Geomol 4-Sep-2009 [4228] | So unless the electric power come from a windmill or similar, it's not really green. |
Graham 4-Sep-2009 [4229] | What sunk the C5 was that they were invisible! Too low in the road. |
Geomol 4-Sep-2009 [4230x2] | It's like the danish "Ellert": http://www.ellert.info/ I see them a seldom time on the danish roads. They're not a big success. |
They should concentrate on this: http://www.moller.com/ ;-) | |
Henrik 8-Sep-2009 [4232] | http://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2009/Sep/0039.html Vista/Win 7 users should probably read this. |
Geomol 8-Sep-2009 [4233] | -> Humour ;-) |
Robert 8-Sep-2009 [4234] | Well Win-7 is not yet there, so use-on-own-risk but Vista is there. That's really a cool one. |
Henrik 14-Sep-2009 [4235x2] | Haiku OS alpha 1 released. So when is R3 going to be ready for it? :-) http://www.haiku-os.org/ |
runs pretty OK. seems similar to BeOS, but not much new. | |
Pekr 15-Sep-2009 [4237] | ClarkConnect (some of us use it) renamed to ClearOS - http://www.clearfoundation.com/ClearOS-Overview/clearos-overview.html |
Pekr 16-Sep-2009 [4238] | Google releases Chrome 3.0 - http://www.osnews.com/story/22170/Google_Releases_Chrome_3 |
amacleod 16-Sep-2009 [4239] | Funny, I have and have been using v3 and did not know...atleast I did not notice any big differences or know when it was updated.. |
Maxim 16-Sep-2009 [4240] | you see, chrome's release channel system is EXACTLY what I explained R3's should be. separate channels releasing versions independently. |
Pekr 16-Sep-2009 [4241] | ah, I thought that Max could support the model :-) But - some users do ask - what's really new? Google adding few tidbits and raising product main version number? |
Maxim 16-Sep-2009 [4242x4] | new "whole" versions are often changes deep inside the kernel and invisible on the surface. they probably added support for things like html 5 and video, etc. |
like FF 3.5 | |
but I'm just speculating. | |
the iphone can now bragg about having bad applications :-) http://www.osnews.com/comments/22161 | |
BrianH 16-Sep-2009 [4246x2] | Google is doing the continuous improvement model, a good one if you can afford to autoupdate without prompting. We can't. |
Maxim, they already do brag about having bad applications, except they call them "apps" for short :) | |
Maxim 16-Sep-2009 [4248x2] | hahaha |
but now you have a professional "sucky application" dev environment to make your job easy at it ;-) | |
BrianH 16-Sep-2009 [4250x2] | MonoTouch isn't bad - C# actually turned out to be better than Objective C for these kind of things. |
That's why so many games for the iPhone are written in C#, on the other professional C# dev environment for iPhone: Unity3D. | |
Maxim 16-Sep-2009 [4252] | (.net is bad) I wonder how they prted .net to the iPhone. |
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