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Science Technology

My Segway HT "Month-iversary" 652

Phillip M. Torrone writes "I didn't realize it, but I've been using a Segway HT for one month as of 01/04/03. To put it simply--it's been great and the HT has exceeded all expectations, I'm cautiously optimistic that this was a great purchase and look forward to the next 30 days. You can read, see and hear about my experiences here: http://www.bookofseg.com." I have yet to see one of these in real life, but they do look fun.
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My Segway HT "Month-iversary"

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  • Concept (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BrianGa ( 536442 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:36PM (#5017078)
    I think all the people who are saying "electric scooter, big whoop. $3,000, yeah right" are slightly missing the point. Yeah, it's kind of wimpy for the price tag. Yeah, it's kind of expensive, and it's questionable who would want to use it.

    But this is just the first model. It's more sort of a proof of concept--a demonstration that the scooter can work, and looks as neat as all get-out in motion. As time goes on, the performance will improve and the price will fall.

    Look at the Palm (Pilot). The first model was, what, 128K? With no backlight, no infra-red, or anything? And how high was the price tag? And now the Visor Deluxe, which was at one time the wet dream of anybody who even looked at a Palm, is only $130 brand new.

    Look at the DVD player. The original models were expensive enough, the first bunch of discs were glitchy enough, that a lot of people scoffed and made snide remarks. But the DVD went on to become the fastest-adopted new consumer technology ever.

    So here we have a relatively slow, electric-powered self-stabilizing scooter, for $3,000. Are very many of us going to buy it? Do very many of us have the money to sink into that sort of gee-gaw? No and no. I know I'm not going to be spending three grand on something like that myself, either. Nor would I be likely to spend two grand, or even one grand.

    But by the time it gets to about $500, sign me up.
    • Re:Concept (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Handpaper ( 566373 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:52PM (#5017165)
      This article [sfweekly.com] contains many of the best reasons that this device is a complete waste of time. It seems to me that somebody remembered the Sinclair C5 [slashdot.org], realized people wanted to be on the sidewalks where they felt safer, and wasted a dynamic stabilization system.
      Incidentally, does anyone know how much weight the Segway is designed to handle? Because if it does become popular, its gonna need to handle much more...
      • Weight (Score:5, Informative)

        by uptownguy ( 215934 ) <UptownGuyEmail@gmail.com> on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:57PM (#5017199)
        Incidentally, does anyone know how much weight the Segway is designed to handle?

        From the How Stuff Works Website [howstuffworks.com]:

        Weight capacity: 250 pound (110 kg) person with 75 pounds (34 kg) of cargo.

        (Good link about more Segway stuff without all of the marketing hype at Howstuffworks, too.)
        • Re:Weight (Score:3, Interesting)

          by EvilAlien ( 133134 )
          By "cargo", do they mean "belly" and/or "ass"?

          If the Segway replaces walking for the average person, then the "it will make Americans fatter" argument has some merit unless the users' lifestyle is adjusted to compensate, i.e., more trips to the gym via Segway. If it replaces driving, then we will see environmental benefits. If it replaces biking, we are midway between the two.

          I just don't see the point of this technology. It is the most over-hyped invention I've ever seen. I'd rather spend a couple grand on some neat technology that helps me get smarter or at least has some entertainment value (travelling between point A and point B has to get pretty boring pretty fast). I see no value in the Segway.

        • Re:Weight (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Desert Raven ( 52125 ) on Sunday January 05, 2003 @12:24AM (#5017920)
          Weight capacity: 250 pound (110 kg) person with 75 pounds (34 kg) of cargo.

          It's gonna have to do a lot better than that if it's going to succeed. Let's face it, the folks most likely to want one are those who sweat five gallons walking across the street.

          The local ambulance company here just got a special ambulance for handling extremely heavy patients. (Extra-heavy rear suspension, extra-large stretcher, electric winch to pull the stretcher in, etc...) They won't even dispatch it unless the patient weighs more than 500 pounds...

          The crews assigned to it hate it because they don't get to take a break all day. They run from call to call from the moment shift starts until the shift ends. Regular ambulance crews are still getting calls to handle extremely overweight patients, because there's just so damn many of them.

          The way I figure it, if they don't build it to handle at least 450+ pounds, they're going to be dealing with lawsuits because they're breaking, or ADA lawsuits because it won't handle weight-challenged people.
          • Re:Weight (Score:3, Insightful)

            by matguy ( 7927 )
            Without going too much in to weight debates, maybe the point is if you're too heavy for the Segway the excercise may do you some good.
      • Re:Concept (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Xerithane ( 13482 ) <xerithane.nerdfarm@org> on Saturday January 04, 2003 @11:02PM (#5017522) Homepage Journal
        This article [sfweekly.com] contains many of the best reasons that this device is a complete waste of time.

        That is the worst article I have ever seen in SF Weekly, and that's saying a lot.

        A tsunami of Lard? What the hell, like everyone who is going to use a Segway wont just drive in a car? Why is a scooter going to make people fat when they have to stop using it out of safety concerns if they start to weigh in over 110kg.

        Their arguments are this, "Segway makes you fat, and cracks marble walls." They have no evidence of either, as I read it. Are they claiming she ran into the wall, or did her segway do it after she jumped off? Either way, it's a stupid remark that seems like she didn't do it because there is zero documentation on her "vandalism."

        There are no reasons why it was a waste of time, there were a few speculations and a lot of bitterness. I think whoever wrote the article was probably just pissed his bicycle shop is going to take a hit.

        Because if it does become popular, its gonna need to handle much more...
        Yeah.. because efficient transporation makes people fat. News flash, people get fat for other reasons. Fat people don't ride bikes, unless it's for excercise. Their fat long before the Segway came along. End of story.

        This FUD is worthy of Anti-Microsoft or Anti-Linux posts, you should be proud.
    • Re:Concept (Score:5, Interesting)

      by NeuroManson ( 214835 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:01PM (#5017221) Homepage
      I dunno, there's electric motorscooters that have a vastly superior range over Segway, run around $2,000 less, and are as easy to ride around on as a bicycle.

      I mean, when Segway's MSRP is being beaten out by Hammecher Schlemmer, it doesn't take a genius to tell who's trying to pull a fast one.
      • Re:Concept (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 )
        There are also cheap gas powered scooters like Honda's Metropolitian or Elite 80, both with MSRPs around $2000. Their engines are sufficient to drive them to full road speeds, they have a rather long range on their 1 gallon tanks, and can be quickly refuled at any standard service station.

        Personally, if I wanted efficient, small, no-effort transportation, I'd look at one of these. They are far more practical than a Segway as well as cheaper.
        • Re:Concept (Score:3, Insightful)

          You're compairing apples to oranges. A scooter is designed to operate on the road. They are looking to the Segway where only pedestrians are normally allowed. It's a different animal looking to fill a different nitch. SAM's used to put there employees, especially the cute girls in roller blades, to zip around the store doing errands and customer service. Same concept for the Segway. Zoo's, guided tours, security, messengers, you get the idea. Saw a ton of these things at Epcot Center in Florida. These guys were roving information booths and probably security to boot. It's a good concept and if it can be cut in half in size I can imagine quite a few people who have many miles everyday will look into them to be more productive. Personally I think they just need to close off a lot of the streets to cars and make everyone use shuttles or bikes, but then that's just me.
    • Hey, I know how you feel, I bought one of the first MP3 car players, about 550 bux. Now they are so many brands you can get them at Kmart for 60.

      At work the marketing folks call these people, "Early Adopters". They make it so the average moms/dads/kiddies can buy them at normal prices. So please keep buying them, and drop the price for us. :)
    • I don't think your examples work for the segway. You examples work for most products though. Just that when you make a jump to something like this is doesn't work. A seqway is very expensive, and doesn't bring very much to the world that the few hundred dollor e-scooters you can buy anywheres allreayd have. Also it's not a problem of cost or new technology and such. It is simple an item with very limited use. And its not something that will continuly find new uses. Things like safty are issues. But just it's use is a problem. It cannot be used in a lot of situations. It really only works in cities, and warm climate ones. Needs cities that have a place for it to run. Many cities arn't going to alow them on sidewalks since they cause more of a safty issue than bikes or roller bladers that are allready banned. Things like a palm pilot may have been over kill for their uses but work universialy and have few limitations, and will continue to find new uses.

      I can see segways in uses like mail men chariots, and use in warehouses. But it's not something that the mass public has a use for or can even dream up a use for. If there was the previous electric scooters would have had big impacts allready. Even if a segway in time becomes a $200 dollar item, few people will buy one since they have no use for it, or can't use it do to where they live.
      Also walking will always remain popular mode of transportation, this thing will not help reduce the gross national product of fat in the US. Things like palm pilots relived people of trying to remember to much stuff. DVD's replaced a poor techology.

      Your anologies work, but not for all things.
  • this is science?! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by adminispheroid ( 554101 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:37PM (#5017081)
    What in the world is this story doing in the science section?
  • Astroturf? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Tyler Eaves ( 344284 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:39PM (#5017088)
    Does the linked site reek of astroturfing to anyone else?
    • Re:Astroturf? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by starling ( 26204 )
      Given that he spent a weekend at Dean Kamen's house and talks about it on the web site I don't think astroturfing's the right word. Fanboy-ism maybe, but there's nothing necessarily wrong with that.
      • Fanboy-ism maybe, but there's nothing necessarily wrong with that.

        In today's depressed economy, he nonetheless has $3000 to blow on the Segway and immense amounts of time to spend describing life with the HT in obscene detail on his website. And he's only had it for a month. This is wrong on so many levels. . .

        The worst fanboy experience I ever had was seeing some poster on comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy write about Windows 98, without a trace of irony: "Congratulations, Microsoft, you've done it again!" The Segway actually looks cool, but that site is like a giant HTML handjob for Dean Kamen.
        • Yeah, it is a bit tasteless.

          As it happens I got a chance to try out a Segway at a demo, and while it's sort of neat and could be very useful at work it's still a rich kid's toy at the current price.
        • Re:Astroturf? (Score:3, Insightful)

          by djupedal ( 584558 )
          The question may well be...did he actually spend $3k, or was he comp'd? If he spent time at Dean's house, odds are high it was a gift/loan and his money is not on the table, while his public rep is.
    • Re:Astroturf? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Otter ( 3800 )
      On the other hand, I've never seen one and until now have never heard of anyone owning one. Would you want to read a Segway report from me?

      Right now, any Segway user (except the mailmen and park rangers, if they have them yet) is an over-amped, obsessive enthusiast. This is probably just one of them.

  • Maybe (Score:2, Interesting)

    I'd love to use one for abit but...All the time? - It seems too cumbersome - And I would not dare lock it up where I would have locked a bike
  • by KPU ( 118762 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:41PM (#5017101) Homepage
    Did the editors actually look at the page? One interesting and unsupported claim is "while entertaining some friends one of the most asked questions were "can it be locked up like a bike" (yes) how secure is? (very) can people "hack" the 64 bit encrypted key (no, not really)..." Have these people heard of distributed.net?
  • My solid platinum Escalade is the shiznatz.

    C'mon people, Even Dean Kamen says his scooter is a playtoy and totally unlike his staircliming wheelchairs and other assistive technologies that save and improve lives.
  • How many of you wondered what the hell si this all about anyway? I sure did! Fortunatly the Segway [segway.com] webpage explains everything quite well, with pictures too!

    Is it just me or does that look a lot like one of them human powered lawn mowers? Needless to say, I would never be caught dead on one!
    • How could you not have heard of "Segway"? There was a HUGE PR thing about it a couple years ago before Dean Kamen unveiled it, everyone said it will revolutionize the economy and the world, steve jobs was impressed, bill gates was in awe...
  • unexciting movie (Score:3, Informative)

    by jdkane ( 588293 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:48PM (#5017140)
    Okay, just a warning, the home movie included on that page isn't near as action-packed as the Segway promotional pieces (in fact it's boring -- they climb up and down 3 hills over 5 minutes). But the music redeems it (two stars out of 5 **___).. Using a real movie analogy, it's like the speed of Mrs. Brown [imdb.com] compared to The Matrix [imdb.com]. If the website is /.'ed then don't bother with the movie.
  • by djupedal ( 584558 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:48PM (#5017141)
    And what else does P. M. Tyronne endorse? [gizmodo.net]

    XBox live, for one...and the iPod...and large doses of Flash [flashenabled.com], apparently. This gentleman is a one-man press release :)
    • by darkov ( 261309 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:16PM (#5017318)
      Slashdot is increasingly becoming a tool of the guerilla (sp?) marketers. Editors should get a clue on a story before posting it. What do these guys get paid for, anyway?

      But back on topic, am I the only one who wouldn't be seen dead driving one of these? It's so geeky in a very uncool way. And since you can't really carry anything on it which you could carry yourself, it screams "lazy prick" and is impractical. I predict after the early adopters, the people who think it's neat and people who collect artifacts of the modern age buy one, the company will quietly go out of business.
  • upright wheelchair (Score:4, Interesting)

    by trance9 ( 10504 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:49PM (#5017145) Homepage Journal

    A reasonable bicycle can be had for around $100 and will get you anywhere you want to go, and get you into better shape as well. You won't sweat on your bike if you travel at segway speeds either.

    I really don't see the appeal of this $3000 upright motoroized wheelchair--what will it do for me that my bike won't?

    Can it hop curbs? Is it easy to lock up on the street? I just don't get it, sorry.
    • Great arguement. You're right who would want to have a powered mode of transportation over the good old fashioned bicycle.

      Now, please re-read your arguement and make the following subsitutions:
      bike -> horse
      Segway -> car
      (You may wish to ignore the bit of getting sweaty on the horse...)

      Your arguement is not new. It's been said and lost before.
      • Thats a tired example. Segway has nowhere near the range of a car, it's far inferior as a mode of transport. Sorry to burst your bubble but the segway is useless to 99.9% of the human population.
    • by trance9 ( 10504 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:15PM (#5017311) Homepage Journal

      At segway speeds on a bike you aren't going to work up a sweat at all, you'll use less energy than walking. Mostly you'll just be coasting along, and you'll pedal only every now and then.

      Powered individual transit ought to be able to merge in either with pedestrians or with cars. Otherwise it's too limited--if you can only ride on the road, or only on the sidewalk, if you can't hop curbs, etc., then it's kind of pointless.

      A non-motorized scooter, by the way, can hop curbs pretty easily: take your foot off for one second and step over the curb. You can do it smoothly and hardly breaking your speed.

      The self-balancing thing, I think, is a boondoggle. I'm not sure it's really that useful: a powered tricycle would also suit you but it wouldn't be so "cool".

      Well, if wasting $3000 is cool, welcome to it.
    • well, for one thing the segway was more marketed towards people like mailmen and such - and it's an improvement over thier current needs.

      Then there are places that propelled transportation is very desirable (such as where I live, an extremely hilly area - east tennessee) where many hills are kinda long and steep for a bike ride (as a teenager I had a spedometer on my bike, by about halfway down the hill I lived on I got up to 45 MPH coasting - no input from me - and I finally lost nerve and braked - I was still accelerating). I've seen pictures from california where things are pretty dense and steep - so they would be usefull.

      The important part of your post is "what will it do for me that my bike won't?" - probably nothing, but that doesn't mean it won't for someone else - not every single person on the planet lives in the same environment that you do.
    • Bicycles (Score:2, Informative)

      Just what part of the world do bicycles cost $100? Cheapest I've ever found a new bicycle is $250. You might find a Huffy, Murray or Magna claiming to be a bicycle around that price range, but in reality, these are single-use units (ask your local bicycle commuter and he'll probably agree with this statement). For the short-distance, never out after dark, in the rain or carrying anything, expect to pay about $250.

      If you ever have to ride at night, in the rain, or carry stuff, expect to pay extra for lights (as required by law), full-length fenders (unless you like the "dragged through the mud" look), and luggage racks, possibly panniers or a trailer for larger loads. If you go the Boy Scout method and have lights, speedometer (bikes have to follow the same rules of the road [state.or.us] including speed limits (I learned the hard way in downtown)), luggage rack, fenders, airhorn, and a rear-view mirror, expect to pay closer to $850.

      Either way, you're right, bicycles are far more practical and far less expensive than a Segway.

    • In 40 or so odd states it is legally allowed to be "driven" on public sidewalks in heavily congested areas where people on bikes have to actually get off and walk them or get fined.

      I honestly dont understand how this got passed, but you can bet someone will be run over in one and that will be the end of it.

    • by Spunk ( 83964 )
      Interesting that you call it that.

      Kamen actually has created an upright wheelchair [msnbc.com]. Once it's in mass-production, it should do amazing things for the disabled.

      For those of us who can walk ... I don't really get the Segway either.
  • by Urthpaw ( 234210 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:49PM (#5017149) Homepage

    The domain "bookofseg.com" is registered [register.com] to Phillip Torrone. (listed on the about page [bookofseg.com] as well). According to his site [flashenabled.com], this guy works at Fallon [fallon.com], an advertising company devoted to "generating disproportionate results for our clients through a unique combination of rigor, relentlessness, and surprise" [fallon.com].

    What I'm getting at is, how do we know that this site isn't just a plant by Segway's marketing agency?

    • Aagh (Score:5, Interesting)

      by dachshund ( 300733 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:14PM (#5017308)
      What I'm getting at is, how do we know that this site isn't just a plant by Segway's marketing agency?

      What do you mean "how do we know it isn't a plant"? Of course it's a plant.

      I don't mind the dupes. I don't mind the mistakes. But blithely posting underhanded ad pitches on the front page cross the line.

      I like Slashdot, and I've never before stooped to bitching at the editors... But I can't take it anymore: what the fuck is the matter with you guys? I know VA Linux stock ain't doing all that well, but for christ's sake, you have jobs unlike a lot of Slashdot's readership. If you don't care about this site-- which seems to be the case-- why don't you step down and let someone else take over?

    • simple, it IS a plant by segway's marketing department. I know people make fan sites ... but some of that stuff goes beyond simple fan-boy articles. He's even got links to buy it at amazon. Its a barely covered astroturf campaign. To top it off he even throws in a great description of Kamen. If I read any more of this site I'm gonna puke.

      "over thanksgiving weekend, we went to dean kamen's house for a amazing tour, a great dinner and a glimpse into one of the greatest minds of our time...i'll have a full write up later..."

      He's more bought than a hooker's enthusiam. NT though

  • WarScootering, the wave of the future.

    I think I'll wait 50 years for the flying model that's only $50,000,000(inflation).

    Could the same gyroscoping stabilization scheme used in the seqway be used for stabilizing ultralite airplanes? Just trying to bring the discusion from the advertisement category to the science category.
  • by bwalling ( 195998 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:53PM (#5017173) Homepage
    That thing only has a range of 15 miles. That's really not very far if you're not in college or living in Manhatten. It's 7 miles round trip for me to get to a grocery store. Beyond the grocery store (and a gas station), it's well more than 15 miles to get to anything else.

    Before you ask: no, I don't live in the boondocks. I live in a metropolitan area (Tampa, FL, US).
    • I think more important than range in your case is carrying capacity. Even if you can get to the grocery store with it... what's the point? Plan on riding it 7 miles daily to pick up groceries? :) You won't even get any exercise for your wasted time and trouble.
  • by Anenga ( 529854 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @09:56PM (#5017191)
    If you haven't heard, the was banned in San Francisco [geek.com]. Ouch.

    The judges claim they banned it because it is "unsafe for city sidewalks", but they also commented that the Segway is "a national threat at least as grave as Iraq" because of laziness. I don't think Iraq is that dangerous, so I don't know exactly what that comment is suppost to mean =) Also they said they didn't want to see a "potential tsunami of lard".

    Personally, I don't think Segway is the "future of transportation". I'd much rather see PRT [taxi2000.com] everywhere in the future.
    • The judges claim they banned it because it is "unsafe for city sidewalks",


      The ban was by the "supervisors," presumably the city council equivalent. Not judges who don't (or at least aren't supposed to) make policy.


      commented that the Segway is "a national threat at least as grave as Iraq" because of laziness. I don't think Iraq is that dangerous, so I don't know exactly what that comment is suppost to mean =) Also they said they didn't want to see a "potential tsunami of lard".


      These comments were made by an editorial writer for the SF Times, not any government official.

  • I won't be buying your Segway, when I can easily afford a decent used car for the same price, and actually be able to get around the Puget Sound (try getting anywhere here with a Segway, and be prepared to do a lot of hitchhiking).

    You'll just have to troll for sales elsewhere.
  • by Dark Lord Seth ( 584963 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:05PM (#5017245) Journal

    New hobby for those of you with too much money and spare time! Segway modding! New mods include:

    • Supercharger
    • Tank tracks
    • Built-in boombox
    • Ridiculous amounts of blue LEDs
    • Ridiculous amounts of red LEDs
    • Ridiculous amounts of red LEDs with a KIT car pattern (cheesy music excluded)
    • USAF certified afterburner
    • 2U rackmounts
    • Nuclear reactor (fuel rods excluded)
    • Nuclear fuel rods (reactor excluded)
    • Fuzzy dice
    • Dual/quad exhaust
  • by droopus ( 33472 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:07PM (#5017258)
    I just came back from a trip to Disneyworld and they have 32 Segways for what seemed like managerial staff and patrolling the parking lots. Even considering how stair-free WDW is, and what large distances might need to be crossed, when I saw the first Segway in the Epcot plaza, first I thought "this is the best tech they can show off? Pffft."

    Then I thought, "hmm, big distances to cover, maybe not the worst idea I ever heard."

    Then I saw the huge Segway display at Innoventions and realized it was just more smart marketing by Dean Kamen. The yokels were all saying "gaaaahlee where's the gas tank?" and similar comments, then getting lessons in gyroscopic stabilization and Michelin tire alchemy from the well-rehearsed cast members. Hey, if they can get high visibility at Epcot, that's better than /.,right? B)

    I've tried one...yeah they are neat, but at 80 pounds, just too heavy to lug ino my car trunk or public transport and when compared for value with a $150 electric Razor, it loses. But as someone said above..bring em down to $500 and I'll consider it.

    Oh, BTW, I lost all respect when I saw them selling whirling Buzz Lightyear lights, glow sticks and flashlight ight-sabers off the Segways at Epcot at night. Gah.
  • Journal entry: Day 3.
    Got my butt kicked by the cool kids again. Maybe I'll see if the geeks at slashdot will respect me instead. Geez this thing sucks. For $3k, I could have bought that snazzy water cooled overclocked P4! Damn!
  • for weeks if not months has had a segway in its upper left-hand corner. (Go to their main page [amazon.com] now to see it[1])

    I found the page it links to [amazon.com] (if this doesn't work, click the segway logo in the link above) interesting, especially the lengthy Amazon.com Review [amazon.com], which somehow fails to mention once how you charge the damned thing. Although apparently Amazon.com staff got to test-drive it, I doubt they got to play with it above 20 minutes.

    [1] This promotion might not be served to logged in users, depending on your shopping preferences. Apparently amazon customizes their content heavily, to the point that some time ago they got in trouble [slashdot.org] for giving different customers different prices.)
  • I got my own Megway [0sil8.com] for Christmas. It can do everything the Segway does, but better. The Megway is also theft resistant with the new Fist Antitheft Device (FAD). I've also discovered that you can take the Megway to parties and make it look like you aren't stuck working a graveyard every Friday and Saturday night. I'm quite happy with my Megway.
  • Beyond Segway (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Cyno01 ( 573917 ) <Cyno01@hotmail.com> on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:13PM (#5017303) Homepage
    A lot of people may not know this, but the segway, in addition to being a means of transportation, is also a testbed for technologies used in Dean Kamans latest invention, the iBOT. Its a new wheelchair thats being tested by the FDA, but most of its technology has been proven in the non medical(meaning it didnt have to be tested by the FDA) Segway HT. The iBOT is a revolutionary wheelchair with that can climb stairs and raise a person up to normal eye-level.
    link [usatoday.com] link [dekaresearch.com] link [indetech.com] link [google.com]
  • Rips off the Mac face for the icons, uses Windows Media for the video, and posts to /.
    Dude, pick a market to target before you start your next ad campaign!

  • by Anonymous Coward
    "the segway ht i series weighs well over 70lbs, without the activation key you'd literally need to drag it around. the weight of the unit, a couple great locks as well as using common sense should keep your ht safe and secure."

    What the heck is this guy thinking? 70 lbs is NOTHING. Most men ought to be able to pick up 70 lbs and toss it on the back of a pickup. I know I could, and I only weigh 230. I hear about motorcycles being stolen all the time on the news by 3 guys picking it up and putting it in a truck, even heavy harleys.

    The guy's a fool if he thinks the weight of the unit will deter anyone from stealing it.

    p.s. My 21" monitor weighs 80 lbs, and who do you think carried it in?
  • hey all you fat rich americans [news-press.com]

    try WALKING

    i mean really, this segway thing is so ridiculous, i am absolutely ashamed looking at it. can you imagine what other people think of you riding around on this thing? it's like training wheels for our electric scooters [medicequip.com] when we're old, fat, with diabetes. i have nothing but derision for anyone who buys one. ;-P

    negativity disclaimer: i am an american, i get paid an above average salary, and i am trying to lose weight.
  • by EnlightenmentFan ( 617608 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @10:59PM (#5017508) Homepage Journal
    This slashvertisement is just one of a series of marketing ploys from Segway fans--their sales must really suck.

    Just last week, Reuters bought and CNN published as a front page story this Amazon /Segway press release. [cnn.com] Reuters must not employ any of those hard-driving investigative reporters we loved in old 30s movies.

    For example the "story" "reports"

    • "pre-orders already place the high-tech scooter in the top half percent of sales" Yeah? Each Segway costs $5000, while the average Amazon item costs maybe $50. So if Amazon sells 100 Segways in a month, it's in the same percentile as a book that sold 10,000 copies in the same month--that's pretty impressive sales for a book, pretty lousy sales for an item that got the publicity buzz Segway did, an item featured on Amazon's front page.
    • "It's selling better than many of our digital cameras" Yeah? And is Amazon the only retailer selling digital cameras, the way it is the only retailer selling Segways? In fact, do you know anybody who would go to Amazon to buy a digital camera?
    • "Frazier declined to provide actual pre-sale numbers" I am sure the carefully phrased hype provided is much closer to what CNN readers care about.
    What got left out of the "news story" is also interesting. There is no mention of the financial stake that Amazon has in pumping up Segway sales by releasing phony hype aimed at making the product look more popular than it is. Jeff Marshall at Mercury News has some interesting background on the financial ties [siliconvalley.com] involved

    Some Reuters Clark Kent may have added one note of reality in the final sentence: "in San Francisco a debate is raging over whether the human transporter should be allowed on that city's streets. " That debate stopped raging a week before this press release came out. According to the Dec. 20 SF Chronicle [sfgate.com], after extensive public discussion 9 of 11 supervisors have voted to ban the Segway, enough to overturn the mayor's veto if he decides to try one.

  • wow (Score:5, Funny)

    by tps12 ( 105590 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @11:08PM (#5017557) Homepage Journal
    From the article:

    washington is one of the 32+ states that have specific legislation that states that the segway ht can go anywhere a pedestrian can go

    Fascinating that they can pass a law that allows the Segway to go up ladders.
  • My Segway Anecdote (Score:4, Interesting)

    by worst_name_ever ( 633374 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @11:29PM (#5017640)
    I was working the booth at a trade show [airventure.org] last summer and who should come rolling up but Dean Kamen [who2.com] himself. Literally rolling, as he was of course riding on one of his Segways. I spent probably ten minutes talking to him about a problem he was having with one of my then-employer's products (or rather, he did most of the talking, as he's a somewhat impatient conversationalist).

    The interesting thing about talking to Mr. Kamen while he was standing on the Segway, aside from the fact that he was of course towering a full head above everybody else in the crowd, was the fact that he is one of those people who likes to lean towards you as he talks. As I learned firsthand, talking to one of these people who happens to be standing on an electric scooter that is controlled by leaning your body means that you are constantly being semi-run-over by the thing, in direct proportion to the intensity of the point the other person is trying to make! He kept having to back the thing up a couple feet, like it was an overly-friendly horse that wanted to lick my face (instead of an overly-pricey scooter that wanted to run over my feet).

    (I would have liked to have a go with his scooter though, as I was not relishing the prospect of having to slog all the way back across the show grounds to the car yet again!)

    mcb

  • by Call Me Black Cloud ( 616282 ) on Saturday January 04, 2003 @11:39PM (#5017682)

    On the security page [bookofseg.com] he wrote

    since the segway ht is used for our commute, we take it in our office and plug in while we're at work. so the segway is safe and secure at all times. other places, we stick to the guidelines above

    Since the damn thing is a single seater (so to speak) who is the "we"? He sounds like Gollum to me...I kept expecting him to refer to it as his "precious".

    P.S. "month-iversary" doesn't make sense. Each year does he celebrate his wedding "year-iversary"?
  • Just one question. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mcgroarty ( 633843 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {ytraorgcm.nairb}> on Sunday January 05, 2003 @12:11AM (#5017853) Homepage
    I just have one question... seriously: Have you weighed yourself before and after?

    I'd love to see whether the Segway makes people more or less active.

  • by LittleLebowskiUrbanA ( 619114 ) on Sunday January 05, 2003 @12:42AM (#5017999) Homepage Journal
    Buy a biycle. Cheap, fast, and actually good for you. Get one with front suspension and some nice riser handlebars. Maybe even a suspension post seat and a cargo basket. All of this will cost you less than a $1,000 U.S. dollars.
    How many people do you know that can admit to getting too much exercise?
  • by sirinek ( 41507 ) on Sunday January 05, 2003 @01:05AM (#5018103) Homepage Journal
    This man says he lives near downtown Seattle, how is he dealing with riding his Segway in the rain. They do get rain almost every day of the year (well not every day of course but still its very rainy there...)

    siri
  • Your Alternatives. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Mulletproof ( 513805 ) on Sunday January 05, 2003 @01:32AM (#5018188) Homepage Journal
    Did some digging and came up with a nifty little comparison. both vehicals are electric, so it all comes down to the nitty gritty.

    Segway [segway.com]
    Range: Appox 15 miles/charge
    Speed: 12mph
    Cost: $4,950.00 [Amazon.com]

    Viento Scooter [zapworld.com]
    Range: Appox. 50 miles/charge
    Speed: 30mph
    Cost: $2,999.99

    There are three main advantages the Segway has over our competitor. 1) It's really compact. 2) It's "sexy" 3) You can drive it on sidewalks, however flawed I may find that. Oh, and auto stabilization for those who didn't learn to ride a bike. That's nice until you realize for about $2,000 less you gain speed, range and utility, only sacrificing some size, percieved coolness and the legalities of driving on sidewalks while gaining Speed, range and utility.

    And no, I'm not considering the supposed saftey of the Segway, because people can still be idiots whatever they drive. Mixing a maximum 250lbs at 12mph on a sidewalk full of pedestrians is a BAD idea. But hey, the Segway is still cool. (I'm sure if you looked hard enough you could find a neato looking scooter too).

    Revolutionary? It's not as if alternatives didn't already exist.
  • by toybuilder ( 161045 ) on Sunday January 05, 2003 @02:38AM (#5018420)
    I live up on a slight hill about 3.5 miles from work.

    For about a year, I had an older (mid-70's model) "Tomos" 2-cycle 50cc "scooter". (Similar to this [ebay.com], but older and needed pre-mixed fuel.)

    Except during the winter when the wind on my face and hands were a bit too cold, I really preferred to take my trips to work and to the grocery store on my scooter. I liked the open-air feeling of gliding on the scooter, and also felt better about not lugging a 3000 lb. car just to carry myself. I was getting about 50 miles to a gallon of fuel + a cup of oil.

    One thing that I didn't like about the scooter was having to drive on the street (along the side, like a bicycle) while cars whizzed by me at 45+ mph. On the uphill stretches going home at night, that got scary sometimes. (My uphill speed was about 15-18 mph; flats around 25; and downhill around 32 mph.)

    I also didn't like having to worry about the bike's chain maintenance (needed frequent cleaning), and the fact that it was a 2-stroke polluter (today's 4-stroke mopeds should be pretty good in comparison).

    When an axel bearing crunched away I couldn't find a convenient place to fix it, I gave it up.

    Since then, I've been thinking about buying another, more modern moped. But I just sorta never did. I toyed with the idea of getting a real motorcycle, and got my class-M permit; but I really didn't want a bike because I would have to be IN traffic, and I prefer not to be in between two cars (or SUV's as is likely to happen around here).

    When the Segway was first revealed, I thought "neat, cool gadget". But I dismissed buying it for myself.

    But, I've been missing that open-air gliding feeling for some time now. The Segway would allow me to get that feeling back (though at 12 mphs, it's a bit slower than I would have liked compared to when I used to pull 20-30). And, since I can used it on sidewalks, I would feel much safer. Since the sidewalks around here (L.A. suburb) are pretty much open, I think I can safely travel at the top speed for most of my travel.

    The only concern I have now is the TCO. While a "full charge" is 11 to 17 miles of range, and costs about $0.10, that translates favorably to my car which gives about 20 miles to the gallon at $1.70. But the batteries are rated only for 300-500 full-charge cycles, or about 3,000 (worst case) to 8000 (best case) miles. The power train is supposed to be a "lifetime" design needing no servicing, so I'm hoping that the supposed 5-(active use)-year lifetime of the Segway holds.

    It's not clear how much a battery replacement will cost... But I'm guessing it'll be about $1,000. So that then pushes the cost up to as much as $0.55 per mile. Even if the battery is $2,000, that's favorable compared to my 3,000 lb. car.

    I can already tell some of my co-workers will approve, and some of them will scoff and ridicule me. But I used to own a scooter, and I liked it. And I've pre-ordered a Segway, and I expect to like it when it arrives. (Yes, it is a small leap of faith.)
  • Pro/Con article (Score:3, Informative)

    by toybuilder ( 161045 ) on Monday January 06, 2003 @04:11AM (#5024147)
    This list of pro's and con's seem pretty fair and balanced. [walkinginfo.org] (At least, when taken from a pedestrian or bicyclist's point of view.)

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