Slashdot Mirror


A Hypothesis On Segway Hate

theodp writes "Admit it, IT is ingenious. Also, IT is surprisingly effective for certain uses, including real cops and mall cops. And if you tried IT, you probably smiled to yourself. So why all the Segway hate? Paul Graham looks into The Trouble with the Segway and offers a hypothesis about what prompts people to shout abuse at Segway riders: 'You look smug. You don't seem to be working hard enough.' Not that someone riding a motorcycle is working any harder, adds Graham, but because he's sitting astride it, he appears to be making an effort. When you're riding a Segway you're just standing there. Make a version that doesn't look so easy for the rider — perhaps resembling skateboards or bicycles — and Segway just might capture more of the market they hoped to reach."

61 of 487 comments (clear)

  1. Or maybe... by Misanthrope · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We just don't see the need for a personal transport device that costs too much for people who are perfectly capable of either walking or biking.

    1. Re:Or maybe... by itsme1234 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apart from being insanely expensive you can't ride it legally in most places, neither on the sidewalk nor on the street. And, oh - did I mention expensive? Nah, it's not that, it's how it makes you look...

    2. Re:Or maybe... by somersault · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I bought an electric scooter to use on the journey to work, and then after using it a couple of times, realised I'd be a lot better off just walking so as to get some exercise (and it's the best decision I've made for a long time - even since I started driving to work again I have kept up with doing a bit of walking in the evenings and weekends).

      Sure a scooter is pretty fast on flat terrain with, but seriously I don't see the use in such a cumbersome device for a cop or mall-cop. If they are chasing someone they are bound to have to get off the thing at some point, and then will be so unhealthy for having not walked anywhere for a year (exaggeration of course) that they won't be able to catch up..

      --
      which is totally what she said
    3. Re:Or maybe... by pjt33 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or it could just be a special case of a more general rule: people dislike other road-users, and especially other classes of road-users. Drivers, cyclists, motorcyclists, and pedestrians all hate each other. Cyclists who use lights at night hate cyclists who don't because they're letting the side down. Cyclists who don't probably think those who do are stuck-up twits. Other subclasses (particularly taxi-, bus-, and lorry-drivers) also attract particular enmity. So why should Segway-riders expect to be different?

    4. Re:Or maybe... by Plunky · · Score: 4, Interesting

      have never tried a unicycle though, so I've no idea how awkward they would be to begin with. I think a crash helmet would definitely be in order for what would in essence be a 15mph bar-stool!

      Its not easy to begin with but you don't really need to worry about banging your head, the natural movement as soon as you start to totter is to just step off onto your feet and I've never heard of falling to the ground. I think probably because your hands are not holding on (when you panic learning on a bicycle, your hands will grip tighter which is exactly the wrong thing to do as it focuses your weight above the centre of gravity :). Shin guards are definitely a good idea though..

      I used to ride a unicycle a couple of miles to work and just pushed it under my desk when I got there. Going up hills is ridiculously easy (the steeper the better you can zip right past bicyclists) but going downhill can be hard on the legs unless you get good enough to freewheel (foot on tyre as brake). If you want to get good, get a smaller wheel and find a unicycle hockey group to join.. (20" is maneuverable but 26" would be better for commuting)

    5. Re:Or maybe... by famebait · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That only explains why we don't all get one, not why we despise those that do.

      Personally I think it's because it just looks silly / "gay". Some, like TFA, might argue that this is the result of intrinsic aspects of its design. I suspect that it is a more than sufficient combination that
      A) We are not used to seeing it
      and
      B) It does not, unlike, say a motorcycle, exude power to counterbalance that unfamiliarity.

      I believe if the regular bike was introduced today, reactions would be much the same.

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    6. Re:Or maybe... by tchuladdiass · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If a film maker wants to show one person as being a dominating character, the camera is lowered so it is looking up into the person's face, vs. filming from a higher position as would be done for a weaker character. That psychological cue is what makes a Segway rider appear more bully-like and smug -- just that extra few inches has a large impact.

    7. Re:Or maybe... by BlackBloq · · Score: 3, Funny

      And everyone hates us ... the skateboarders!

    8. Re:Or maybe... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Apart from being insanely expensive you can't ride it legally in most places, neither on the sidewalk nor on the street. And, oh - did I mention expensive? Nah, it's not that, it's how it makes you look...

      Oh yeah, don't forget the incredible hype before the thing even came out. You know, how It was going to change the way cities were designed and It was the most revolutionary thing since the invention of the wheel. Yeah, it must be how it makes the rider look. /s
      People hate the Segway because of the over the top, ridiculous pre-release marketing. The Segway is an interesting device, but it is a niche market. It is not a "world changing" device.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    9. Re:Or maybe... by suso · · Score: 3, Informative

      Exactly, if the Segway was $700 or less, I'd consider one. But for $3000+, I could buy a motorcycle that would go faster, further and be a little more normal. Heck, for $3000 I could buy a high end racing bicycle and put an electric motor on it.

    10. Re:Or maybe... by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, it's not an effect of the hate, its an effect of the fact that you're not generally allowed to drive motorized vehicles on the sidewalk, and driving something whose top speed is 12 mph in the street isn't safe.

    11. Re:Or maybe... by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "it's how it makes you look..."

      I think it's an instinctual thing, the rider is literally putting themselves on a pedestal. Sort of like a poor man's pope-mobile.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    12. Re:Or maybe... by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here in the midwest you don't see a lot of segways, so I never heard of "segway hate" before; the only ones I've seen had cops on them. And a lot of people don't like cops at all no matter what's transporting them. Between crooked cops, cops with bad attitudes (like the one in Chicago that beat up the five foot tall woman bartender on camera and the one who beat a shackled man in a wheelchair, again on camera), to bad laws that good cops have to enforce, cops have gotten a bad name.

      But if it was a civilian on a segway I think you hit the nail on the head. It's kind of like caddilac hate; it's a combination of envy and the smug, self-important "I'm better than you" attitude people who drive rediculously expensive cars have and the sociopathic way they're driven.

      When the patent runs out you'll see $200 segways, and you this "problem" will go away.

      The GP mentioned bicycles, I used to ride one untill I took a nasty spill on the way to work. I imagine a segway would be quite a bit safer than a bicycle. I'm looking forward to when they're affordable.

    13. Re:Or maybe... by pjt33 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not really, cyclists hate everybody else because they tend to be self righteous pricks.

      This makes them different to everyone else how?

      Drivers hate cyclists because they're self righteous pricks that don't obey the traffic laws.

      This makes cyclists different to drivers how?

      I refer you to the part of my GP post which says "people dislike other road-users". This dislike is intensified by things like differences in acceleration and speed - I could have added "people who drive at the speed limit" as another subclass. The main reason drivers hate cyclists is because they're slow and hold you up; the main reason cyclists hate drivers is because some of them are too impatient to wait when the law says that the cyclist has priority / right of way.

    14. Re:Or maybe... by RobBebop · · Score: 3, Informative

      In my jurisdiction (Cambridge, MA) the law is that you can bike on the sidewalk if you're traveling at a walker's pace. I quite like this rule, but it's not widely known so you still see morons zipping down a sidewalk when there's a perfectly usable bike lane painted on most of the major city roads. Also one of the lesser known laws... bikers have legal access to ANY car lane so if you're in a car and honking at somebody biking slowly in front of you then you're the moron.

      I think what it really boils down to is that normal people have to adjust their behavior and be more cautious so they can accommodate the morons on the roads who are talking on their cell phones (yes, morons in cars, on bikes, and on their feet ALL do it and their lack of attention is a fault) and flagrantly breaking traffic laws. Though, one rare thing I've seen in my city is bicyclers getting pulled over by cops and issued $25 tickets for running red lights.

      --
      Support the 30 Hour Work Week!!!
    15. Re:Or maybe... by natehoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Safety statistic comparisons between a segway and a cycle are going to be tricky. They are completely different vehicles operating in different areas.

      I've only got a couple thousand bicycle commuting miles under my belt, but for my commute a segway would be completely impractical. I ride 15 miles each way, and most of that commute is on roads that don't have sidewalks (a good chunk of the commute is on roads that lack shoulders entirely). By cycling carefully (that is, staying as close to the side as possible, riding to the right of the white when there is a shoulder and it's not too broken up, and watching my mirror and being aware that every car might decide not to move over), I've managed to go two years without an accident at all. A few close calls, but no accidents.

      But a segway is a pedestrian device, not a roadway one. The major danger with pedestrians is being unaware of the stopping distance of cars, and/or encountering a car that fails to yield in a crosswalk. A car taking a right-hand turn onto a side road with a "blind crosswalk" (a crosswalk the driver cannot see until they are executing the turn, say due to parked cars) would be a close second on the danger scale.

      A "safe" segway rider is probably safer than a "safe" bicycle rider only because the segway rider can come to a stop at any place they'd likely encounter traffic and wait for traffic to pass or recognize their presence, while a "safe" bicycle rider has traffic closing behind them and if the traffic is inattentive or has a beef with cyclists, the cycle is an easy kill.

      The real risk with segways and cars is speed. If the segway driver is tootling along on a sidewalk and makes a fast turn onto a crosswalk, there may not be enough time for a car doing 25MPH to come to a stop. Pedestrians tend to (but don't always) stop at the road edge and look for the cars to stop first, and even if they step out they won't tend to be moving very fast into the lane, so if a car can't stop they can at least swerve. Bicycles (with riders mounted, not walking the cycle) and segways have a greater opportunity to get completely in front of the car, and therefore an "unsafe" foot pedestrian is easier to avoid than an "unsafe" segway rider (or bicycle rider who thinks they are a pedestrian all of a sudden, which is also a very stupid idea).

      But a segway is limited to 12MPH and areas where they can legally use sidewalks. So the effective range is greatly reduced, and a segway driver is actually more of a risk to the pedestrians around them than anything else is a threat to them. A bicycle (by law) spends most or all of its time in the motorway, not on the sidewalks. A segway operates in pedestrian zones where there are fewer things capable of hitting them.

      The segway may be safer TO THE RIDER, but it's an increased risk to everyone around it, since it is operating silently at speeds 3-4 times the average pedestrian. Walking along, see an interesting news headline or something in a shop window, stop and walk sideways suddenly, and WHAM, "segway hood ornament".

      This is probably part of the cause of "segway hate", or at least dislike. Segways are as dangerous to pedestrians as bicycles, yet they are allowed to operate on the sidewalks. A well-designed electric bicycle will be cheaper, faster, have better range, and operate on the streets where it is not increasing the risk to pedestrians. The segway is a "new niche" which we don't really have a safe spot for in most places yet.

      Dean Kamen was right about one thing. He said that segways would prompt a redesign of cities. And you do need to redesign a city to allow safe use of segways. He just assumed that enough people really wanted them to justify that redesign.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    16. Re:Or maybe... by rho · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When people say "People do/have/are/etc." they actually mean "I do/have/are/etc." But it's more comforting to believe you're part of a crowd, even when you're not.

      People don't give a shit about the Segway.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    17. Re:Or maybe... by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If they had priced it at $699 and taken a loss for the first year everybody would have gotten one.

      No, they wouldn't have. Because much of their marketing hype pointed to the weaknesses of the product, though it recast them as strengths. When they said "cities will be redesigned for this", what they meant is "cities will have to be redesigned for this to have any use for most people".

      And nothing about the Segway makes it worth the cost of redesigning cities around it.

  2. I'd buy one by sleeponthemic · · Score: 4, Funny

    but the Magicians Alliance would never allow it.

    --
    I record my sleeptalking
    1. Re:I'd buy one by hal2814 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Come on! You think they'd make the guy in a $40,000 suit walk everywhere?

  3. Get off and walk, fattie by paiute · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The technology is pretty sweet, but really. If you can stand, you should be walking. If you can stand but can't walk, then okay. But how much of the population fits that profile?

    It makes me think of the humans in Wall-E.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  4. never understood the segway, by StripedCow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    standing is a lot more fatiguing than walking actually...

    --
    If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    1. Re:never understood the segway, by svtdragon · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...[M]any smiles on pedestrian faces [and] I can read/hold an umbrella.

      I'd smile too, if I saw you trying to read an umbrella...

  5. Over-engineered by sqrt(2) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are few situations where a bicycle wouldn't be a better, cheaper, and more efficient option. The segway is cool, but it's a solution looking for a problem. It's over engineered, too expensive, and in the vast majority of situations offers no benefit over the alternatives.

    --
    If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
  6. Resenting people because they're standing? by synthesizerpatel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No. I think most people resent Segway owners because they can _afford_ a multi-thousand dollar replacement that the rest of us poor suckers have to earn using the old left-foot->right-foot technique.

    If Segway's had a reasonable cost that resentment would go away really quick.

    In Las Vegas fat or lazy people can rent sit-n-go scooters to cart them around the casino because walking would be too much effort. And at that point, you're doing less work than someone standing and only slightly more work than someone sitting in a chair. It's popular because it's cheap, and people have absolutely no shame in using them if they're just lazy.

    And interesting theory that there are deep psychological issues but way off the mark. They just cost too much. If they were $500 everyone would have one.

    1. Re:Resenting people because they're standing? by CountBrass · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think that's true at all.

      I think it's to do with people riding them on pavements: they take up more room than a walker and if you collide with them they hurt.

      People would (and do) react the same way to cyclists trying to ride on a crowded pavement.

      --
      Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
  7. like motorcycle riding? by heitikender · · Score: 4, Informative

    Obviously, author has never ridden a motorcycle - he has absolutely no idea, what it takes to ride such thing. On motorcycle, you have a throttle, first brake, rear brake, 6 gears and clutch. To ride it, you have to (ok, don't have to but would be good) understand counter-steering. And on IT? lean yourself and twist the stick. That's all. Pfffff.

    1. Re:like motorcycle riding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Slow speed turns. Bumps, pot holes, debris, ruts, grates, gravel, wet manhole covers and paint stripes. Avoiding FUCKING SUVS. Visual direction control. Lean angles, peg weighting, body english, counter-steer. Decreasing radius turns.

      Balancing a one-in-front-of-the-other 2 wheeled vehicle traveling at over 70mph through rain, crosswinds and traffic without killing yourself isn't exactly *easy*. It's not really anything like a Segway, and I'm quite angered by this authors belittlement of something that I've spent a very large part of my life learning how to do well. I bet you half of the Segway riders can't even operate a clutch in the first place. He obviously has absolutely no fucking clue.

    2. Re:like motorcycle riding? by 91degrees · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Perhaps, but I haven't ridden a motorbike either. I have no idea what the complexities are, yet would still give more respect for a motorcyclist than a segway user.

      But I think my answer is the inability to perceive the utility of the thing. A motorcycle has speed. Even a very low powered scooter can do 30mph. The idea that people want to get from place to place considerably more quickly means I can see why you want one.

      A 12.5mph Segway just doesn't seem fast enough to justify the cost. It gives the impression that the owner is a lazy rich guy. Maybe it's just envy, but it seems like a hell of a lot of money to spend to go a little bit faster.

  8. "IT"? by Shin-LaC · · Score: 4, Funny

    What does this have to do with information technology?

  9. Re:Slashdot hate by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Too lazy to come up with a relevant answer, ya fucking homo." (before you mod this down rtfa.)

  10. Maybe if they could stand up to the hype .. by AftanGustur · · Score: 3, Informative
    For those who remember the marketing for the Segway, Segway was going to revolutionize human transport. There was even a cloud of secrecy around it, and for months nobody would even tell what this mistery product was.

    The hype was just mind boggling and there is no way Segway wil ever come close to match all the promises that were made.

    The Segway "FAIL" is just another example of the dangers of overhyping a product before it gets to the market.

    --
    echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
    1. Re:Maybe if they could stand up to the hype .. by qbast · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And now when it failed we have that idiotic attempt at astroturfing. Come one, "Segway hate"? It could only happen if someone actually used that thing.
      Next on Slashdot: reports of overwhelming Zune hate. The reason that prompts people to shout abuse is "they look smug and cool and trendy. iPod crowd just can't stand it".

  11. Segway-ers, rollerbladers, skaters, by obarthelemy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    and sometimes cyclists and even bikers... I have the same problem with all of them: I usually walk because I'm in no rush and i want to (daydream) think deeply about life, the universe, and everything. These guys rush by on MY walkway, stirring me out of my reverie at least, sometimes forcing me to jump out of the way.

    They are to walkways what SUVs are to streets.

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
    1. Re:Segway-ers, rollerbladers, skaters, by value_added · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think anyone who owns a dog or who has taken their kids out for a stroll in a carriage can relate to what you wrote.

      The problem, I think, with rollerbladers and skaters is one of scale. If you're a normally functioning biped going about your business, someone travelling at speeds highly disproportionate to your own (or making a helluva lot more noise than you make as skateboarders do) can only be characterised (from your perspective) as somewhere between a danger and a threat.

      Cars even more so. Walking your dog or and having cars drive by at 25-30 mph can be acceptable if there's a barrier, or enough distance separating you. Someone speeding by at 35-45 mph, on the other hand, will most likely elicit an extreme reaction from you. The guy in the car, of course, doesn't care and doesn't notice as he considers himself perfectly safe from you.

      Segways typically don't speed, and they don't make a lot of noise, but they certainly share much in common with what we perceive as threats: something bigger than we are and something which is capable of moving faster than we move. Practically speaking that means they don't belong on the sidewalk, or anywhere people gather or walk normally. And because a slow-moving object on a roadway is also a threat, they certainly don't belong there. That essentially leaves them with nowhere that's appropriate.

      Doesn't help that we tend to view mechanical devices generally with suspicion, and Segway owners specifically as oddballs. That's not to say that Segways themselves aren't interesting.

    2. Re:Segway-ers, rollerbladers, skaters, by zippthorne · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well the real issue is poor urban planning. There should be grade separated lanes for pedestrians, human powered vehicles, and motorized vehicles. You can't ride a bicycle on a busy street OR the sidewalk next to it safely (and possibly legally), but that's a piss poor reason to have to drive to work if you're within biking distance.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  12. I don't hate it by JanneM · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't hate it. I just don't see the point. It seems to try to fill a convenience gap somewhere between walking on one end and bicycles or scooters on the other. At least for me there's simply no gap there to fill.

    --
    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  13. Ever park in a disabled spot? by Rix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People shout abuse for that, too.

    The Segway is a wheelchair for people who's only disability is extreme laziness. No wonder Americans are so goddamn fat.

  14. Bingo by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My objection to the Segway is that we already HAVE a two wheeled, gyroscopicly balanced transport device: It is called a bicycle. Works much better, and is better for you. In the event that the distances you are covering are too far for that, but you still want an efficient two wheeled transport, there's scooters and motorcycles. Even smallish ones can usually reach highway speeds.

    I just don't see the point in the Segway, especially given the price. It can't go that fast, it can't go that far, so it isn't a replacement for a motorized transport. While it technically might be a replacement for a bike... Why? What's wrong with a bike?

    Also the whole package seems kinda... well... stupid. Why all the effort to balance the thing on two, side by side wheels. Why not do as Maddox noted and add a third wheel (http://www.thebestpageintheuniverse.net/c.cgi?u=segway_more_complicated_than_it_needs_to_be)? To me it seems like a tech demo, more than a useful thought in transportation.

    Finally there is the point that a lot of Segway owners are, like the author of this, smug dickheads. They have this attitude of "Oh this thing is so amazing, and I feel so sorry for all you plebs who are uninitiated in to the glory of Segway." My response is "I feel sorry that you spent ten times what I did on my bike for something that goes half the speed."

    1. Re:Bingo by bkpark · · Score: 5, Informative

      My objection to the Segway is that we already HAVE a two wheeled, gyroscopicly balanced transport device: It is called a bicycle. Works much better, and is better for you. In the event that the distances you are covering are too far for that, but you still want an efficient two wheeled transport, there's scooters and motorcycles. Even smallish ones can usually reach highway speeds.

      Actually, a bicycle is not gyroscopically balanced. The angular momentum in the bicycle wheel is tiny compared to the overall mass and moment of inertia of bicycle and the rider. It's actually the rider's own sense of balance (whether the hands are on the handle or not) that keeps the bicycle standing, and which is why you have to learn to ride one.

      This isn't to say, of course, that Segways are superior just because they use a gyroscope.

    2. Re:Bingo by orzetto · · Score: 4, Informative

      If that is so, then why is it so insanely hard to keep the bicycle balanced while not driving?

      Because, on a bike, your manipulated variable is the handlebar's position. When driving, you adjust the handlebar so that the bicycle moves to the side, compensating disturbances. The control action is proportional to handlebar setting angle times speed (roughly), so if speed comes to zero you have no control action available. This is actually gradual: notice how at low speed, you turn the handlebar much more to maintain equilibrium.

      If the bike were actually significantly gyroscopically stabilised, you could bump into a driving biker and see him come back to upright position without him doing anything. In reality, any biker in such a condition will counteract manually using the handlebar.

      --
      Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
    3. Re:Bingo by pelrun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, it's because you're changing the bike's forward direction using the handlebars to nudge the bike back under your centre of gravity. Once you stop, the handlebars don't do that any more (they just turn the front wheel) and you fall over.

      If you tried riding a bike with fixed handlebars you would fall over just as fast as if you were stopped, which wouldn't happen if gyroscopic effects were dominant.

    4. Re:Bingo by javaxjb · · Score: 4, Informative

      But, if you follow the footnotes (e.g., http://web.archive.org/web/20080213072335/http://www.losethetrainingwheels.org/default.aspx?Lev=2&ID=34 ) you will see that experiments have shown how insignificant those forces are.

      --
      Programmers in mirror are brighter than they appear
    5. Re:Bingo by virg_mattes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've seen a lot of discussions about how a Segway and a bicycle compare, but yours is the most logical I can find, so I'll respond to you. The Segway isn't a substitute for a bicycle, which is part of the problem. But, that doesn't mean that a bicycle can substitute for it in all cases either. If you're having trouble picturing a place where it would be more useful than a bike, picture going to work in a big city, in a high rise. Ride your bike to the building. Then, ride it inside, through the lobby, among the crowd. Ride it into the elevator, and then out of it again, down the hall and to your office. My guess is that you'd be in a fistfight by the time you got done (even if you walked your bike through the crowd and into the elevator), but a Segway can move in a crowd at half a mile an hour and takes up not much more room than a person.

      Sure, it's a limited market, but then that's been the problem. As others suggested, it would make a very reasonable replacement for a mobility scooter, if the person using it can stand on it. For those whose jobs require a lot of walking (postal delivery, mall cops, and the like) it can be a godsend. Sure, you can argue that they don't get enough exercise, but if I was doing that job and this device meant that I didn't get flat feet by the time I was forty I'd use it, and I'd get my exercise like every other office worker, at the gym. Moreover, a bicycle would be a poor choice for both of the jobs mentioned and no replacement at all for a mobility scooter.

      As to being smug dickheads, the only real reason for that is that people who tend to have enough money to buy this sort of device also tend toward being elitist. If you want an example of bikers who can be smug dickheads, join a bike race or triathlon that has an entrance fee sometime, and you'll get plenty of snide comments about your "cheap" bike.

      Virg

  15. It's the law by FranTaylor · · Score: 3, Informative

    You can't use a motorized vehicle on the sidewalk in most places.

    You're out of your mind if you drive one in the street.

    So where exactly are you supposed to ride them?

    Indoors in a crowded place it's just an accident waiting to happen.

    As a practical matter they are just toys for the few who can afford them.

  16. It was all the blasted hype by davmoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My dislike of the Segway stems from the ridiculous hype that was spread far and wide about the product before it actually came out. It was built up to be some fantastic device that would cure the common cold, end world hunger, prove the existence of life on Mars, get me the woman of my dreams, and just about anything else one could imagine. Then when it came out, it was nothing but a fancy-ass moped for rich people who were too lazy to walk.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  17. Bullshit by Moraelin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No. I think most people resent Segway owners because they can _afford_ a multi-thousand dollar replacement that the rest of us poor suckers have to earn using the old left-foot->right-foot technique.

    If Segway's had a reasonable cost that resentment would go away really quick.

    Except we're on Slashdot, not on some inner city single black moms site. (No offense to those, just using them as an example of someone who actually has financial problems.) We have plenty of people here who were arguing against taxing incomes over 250k a year because it would personally affect them.

    Trust me, there are plenty of us who could afford a Segway without problems. Not to brag, but I could buy one out of my day-to-day account at the moment, no need to even withdraw from the savings account or cancel any investments.

    There also are a lot of us around who are into new gizmos and gadgets just because they're new gizmos and gadgets.

    When the combination of the two tells you that they see no point in a Segway, then maybe, just maybe, and I know it might sound crazy, they just don't see the point of a Segway.

    What for? It doesn't really go any faster than I can walk, it doesn't even go everywhere where I can walk, it's nowhere as maneuverable on a crowded sidewalk as walking (wake me up when it can just sidestep to get out of the way of someone running), it's extra effort to haul it to where it can be recharged after each trip (it can't go up or down stairs), it takes up space in your trunk if you want to drive anywhere and still use it there (it's not like you can just commute on it), etc. And most importantly, standing for long periods of time is actually less comfortable than walking.

    Plus, you need _some_ movement or you'll get thrombosis sooner or later, and/or end up looking like a beached whale. So the few calories you save by just standing on it, it's calories you'll have to exercise to shed later. You haven't actually saved any effort, you just did the opposite of smart time management. Instead of profiting from that short walk to the groceries store to also get some minimal exercise out of it, you've just created the case for allocating more time for it later. It's a net loss.

    In Las Vegas fat or lazy people can rent sit-n-go scooters to cart them around the casino because walking would be too much effort. And at that point, you're doing less work than someone standing and only slightly more work than someone sitting in a chair. It's popular because it's cheap, and people have absolutely no shame in using them if they're just lazy.

    Yes, but it's sit-n-go. At least it's more comfortable than walking, if you're tired or lazy, whereas standing isn't. Do you understand that point? It doesn't even have that saving grace.

    And interesting theory that there are deep psychological issues but way off the mark. They just cost too much. If they were $500 everyone would have one.

    Or maybe the only ones with deep psychological problems are the twits who need to project them on everyone who isn't awed by their conspicuous consumption.

    In fact, I suspect that if segways did cost only 500, they'd actually lose sales, because then those twits would need something else to say, "look at what I can afford."

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Bullshit by GlenRaphael · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It doesn't really go any faster than I can walk

      Actually it does, really, go quite a lot faster than you can walk. Unless you can walk over 12 mph, which I rather doubt. But your impression it doesn't does reveal another possible reason people scoff at it. In trying to make it a mass market device, they bent over backwards to make it safe. The segway is, quite frankly, too safe. Too few people have hurt themselves by using one. The multiple keys and speed limiters make it inconvenient to go fast; removing any element of skill in staying upright makes it hard to swerve out of control. So unlike with a motorcycle or a skateboard - two forms of transport it might otherwise seem to resemble - there's no illicit flirting-with-danger cachet. A segway rider isn't risking death and isn't demonstrating skill because the machine won't let you go faster than can be easily stabilized.

      Riding a segway is like riding a tricycle slowly wearing a huge helmet, full pad, and full yellow reflectors. Who needs to be *that* safe?

      So I recommend they design an "extreme" version of the segway with different styling which includes an "overdrive" gear with no speed limiter so you can drive fast enough that it actually takes skill not to die. Or perhaps let people know how to *hack* their segways to get rid of the speed limiter. Once a few thrill-seekers have died from going over 100mph on a segway and crashing into a tree, it might start to seem a little cool.

      --
      I play Nerd-Folk!
  18. Unacceptable on the sidewalk, stupid on the road by enrevanche · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because they were designed for use among pedestrians. When you are on foot you do not want these things anywhere near you. They are obnoxious and dangerous to a pedestrian.

    They do not belong on the sidewalk and you would be an idiot to use them on the road. For them to ever become popular, cities would need a redesign.

    They cannot be easily moved up or down stairs, they are not acceptable on an elevator unless it is a freight elevator, they are difficult to get in or out of a car, they cannot be brought on public transportation.

  19. just get a bicycle by quenda · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apart from being insanely expensive you can't ride it legally in most places,

    And why would you want to? For most people, 'it' is inferior in every way to a bicycle.
    Costs more, slower, less reliable, and gives you no exercise.
    OK, so maybe it is hot and 100% humidity where you live, you are fit and ideal weight, so the exercise is not a bonus. How does 'Ginger' beat a folding electric bike?
    This is geeky-cool tech no doubt, and I'd love to try one. But it has zero practical value, which could not clash more with all the hype that this gadget arrived with.

    1. Re:just get a bicycle by Admiral_Grinder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only people I have seen use one are older people that have no problem being on there feet, but takes great effort to walk or they walk slower than a baby can crawl. I guess it has a non-zero practicality after all. Takes up less space than a power chair and is more mobile.

    2. Re:just get a bicycle by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Informative

      The ways in which it beats a bike aren't wildly useful, outside of niche applications; but there are some:

      Stopping: a segway stops swiftly and can remain in place without extra effort by the rider or any loss of stability.

      Turning: a segway can turn either on the move or entirely in place(being able to turn entirely within your own footprint is handy for tight areas).

      Visibility: riding a segway gives you a few extra inches, generally enough to see across a crowd, that a bike typically doesn't.

      Now, for most people, those advantages don't outweigh the costs of a whole bunch of fancy gyroscopes and some dirty looks; but for those that do need them(mall cops and tour groups, for instance, where takup has been pretty decent) they do count.

    3. Re:just get a bicycle by dr2chase · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think a Segway stops any faster than a bicycle. An regular bicycle can stop at about .5G using the front brake, about .25G using the rear brake. The limits are imposed by physics; either going over the handlebars, or losing traction as weight is transferred forward (can real cyclists stop that fast? Yes, I have done it myself). A Segway rider is pretty much over the wheels (i.e., the CG is well forward of where it is on a bicycle). It's possible that a Segway could stop that fast, if it tilted backward by about 27 degrees (atan 0.5) -- can it do that?

      A bicycle also gives you a few extra inches, depending on the bike. I cannot easily touch the ground, even stretching and shifting, from the seat of the bike I usually ride. Standing on tippy-toes on the pedals gives me at least an extra foot over my standing height.

      I can still see it working better for a mall cop, most cases, but two out of your three claims aren't wins -- the Segway scores worse, or no better.

      Speaking of maneuverability, can a Segway do http://www.vimeo.com/groups/14976/videos/4207784? :-)

    4. Re:just get a bicycle by guyfawkes-11-5 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think a Segway stops any faster than a bicycle. An regular bicycle can stop at about .5G using the front brake, about .25G using the rear brake. The limits are imposed by physics; either going over the handlebars, or losing traction as weight is transferred forward (can real cyclists stop that fast? Yes, I have done it myself). A Segway rider is pretty much over the wheels (i.e., the CG is well forward of where it is on a bicycle). It's possible that a Segway could stop that fast, if it tilted backward by about 27 degrees (atan 0.5) -- can it do that? A bicycle also gives you a few extra inches, depending on the bike. I cannot easily touch the ground, even stretching and shifting, from the seat of the bike I usually ride. Standing on tippy-toes on the pedals gives me at least an extra foot over my standing height. I can still see it working better for a mall cop, most cases, but two out of your three claims aren't wins -- the Segway scores worse, or no better. Speaking of maneuverability, can a Segway do http://www.vimeo.com/groups/14976/videos/4207784? :-)

      A decent bike rider also shifts their center of gravity backward or forwards as needed. Blasting downhill on singletrack, you slide back on the seat or hang your ass over the rear tire. Skid stopping a hipster fixie, you lean as far forward over the front wheel as possible. BTW, if you cant stand on your tippy-toes while seated, the seat is too high, or the frame is too large.

    5. Re:just get a bicycle by mdarksbane · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It also has the added advantage of not being easily knocked over when you leave it some place. You just step off and it stays where it is.

      And believe it or not, there *are* places where the added exercise (and therefore stink and sweat) of a bike is not an advantage.

      I've seen them used by crews for different large events as an alternative to those little carts you see people drive around, and they seem to work really well for that. When you have to travel back forth across the super dome many times a day through a large crowd it can be an improvement on a bike or walking. Or if you have to do something like that while wearing a suit.

    6. Re:just get a bicycle by billcopc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Except for the fact that if you're a slow/weak walker, you'd rather be seated than have to stand on this contraption.

      I see the Segway as an excellent indoor or limited-range vehicle, e.g. in museums, malls, factories, big dumb mansions, maybe golf courses ? The submitter's example of mall guards is perfect, IMO. They have to make their rounds a gazillion times, where the increased mobility is greatly welcome.

      For everyday commuting, however, the Segway is far too restrictive and simply unusable in many cities due to pedestrian volume, regardless of bylaws. Even in my relatively quiet Ottawa, I couldn't see myself using this on the sidewalks, and with all the idiot gov't drivers I wouldn't trust the streets either.

      It's an excellent niche product, end of story.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
  20. It looks stupid by supercrisp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read the posts and the article, and I can't believe no one else understands the "hate." People on Segways look like idiots. You're perched up high with a dorky bicycle helmet where everyone can see you. You look sort of like Rick Moranis in Spaceballs.

    I had NEVER thought about Segways much until a recent trip to Vienna. Sure, I'd seen that photo of the Chinese riot cops on Segways or Sameways or whatever, and my reaction was, hmm, that makes sense. But in Vienna people were renting Segways to tool around the city. You could see them in the distance, tall dorky mushroomy touristy goobuses. Maybe it was the backdrop of florid Art Deco/Historicist architecture or the way everyone was nicely dressed.

    Appearances alone. That's enough to inspire the so-called "hate." It's clear that the article's author doesn't get anything about style when he compares the Segway to a motorcyle. Let me set this straight: Marlon Brando on motorcyle, cool; Wozniak on a Segway, not cool. The problem is nerds have a messed-up idea of cool, or at least one not shared by the population at large. Aesthetics matters. I'm not saying this is perfect or right; it just is. And the general population has some dumb aesthetics. But appearances still matter.

  21. It's Ugly by JSmooth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It just doesn't look natural. Time and again scientists, engineers or artists design a more efficient process or item and yet it never penetrates beyond a small group of fanatics. The segway just looks awkward. For comparison consider the Pontiac Aztec (generally considered to be the ugliest car of the last 25 years) It could be practical, have tons of space, and it is still ugly. Same reason we are not all living in geodesic (sp?) domes.

    Function over form rarely works and without a sudden artistic shift to the accepted (think Sideburns or bellbottoms) I doubt IT will ever win a wider audience.

  22. Re:The main reason I've seen for Segway hate by stonewallred · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you are on a bike and bump me with your front wheel, you will quickly find yourself on your ass. Just what kind of person are you that you would allow yourself to be assaulted without responding with force to protect yourself? Perpetuating that geeks are pussies with that attitude. Grow a pair and knock the bicyclist off his bike and kick his ass if he bumps you with it.

  23. UK "pavement" = US "sidewalk" by dr2chase · · Score: 3, Informative

    UK "pavement" = US "sidewalk"

  24. Self-importance = low self-esteem by pRtkL+xLr8r · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The guy with a Mac sitting at Starbucks blogging about his new car. The dude at the bar with a bluetooth headset in his ear while he's not even on the phone. They guy tooling down the street with a Segway to get to the Apple store for the new iPhone. They all fit into the category of 'look at me, I'm important, please take notice of this so I can feel better about myself.'

    The kid with the netbook directly jacking into the school server to change his grades. The Navy Seal with the headset and mic relaying position information. They dude on the skateboard doing an ollie over some trash while trying to get to work on time. They're all doing something functional, and look pretty damn cool doing it.