There’s a good case for this
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I periodically think about the hype around the Segway, how luminary types were over the moon for it in private demos but then the general public decided it was uncool, and think maybe actually the luminaries had it right and it’s the public that biffed it.
@inthehands
It'll change the future of urban design! -
I periodically think about the hype around the Segway, how luminary types were over the moon for it in private demos but then the general public decided it was uncool, and think maybe actually the luminaries had it right and it’s the public that biffed it.
@inthehands OTOH, Segways are fundamentally uncool.
People are very on board with electric scooters, which are technically sideways Segways. But cool.
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@inthehands
It'll change the future of urban design!@xinit
I mean, I remember that and…what if it should’ve, actually?? -
(I also wonder how much social countermarketing petrochem slipped in to kill it. If that story’s known, it’s not known to me.)
@inthehands look at how popular electric scooters and bicycles are though: this story is far from over
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I periodically think about the hype around the Segway, how luminary types were over the moon for it in private demos but then the general public decided it was uncool, and think maybe actually the luminaries had it right and it’s the public that biffed it.
I think everyone was wrong on this one. The segway was ok, better than the public gave it credit for, but it was never gonna be a world changing technology. I think the public backlash was against the billionaires telling us what the fuck to do. It came out before the media collapse and the rise of social media and the rise of effective Russian propaganda that taught the billionaires how to do their own propaganda.
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@inthehands look at how popular electric scooters and bicycles are though: this story is far from over
This is what I’m saying! Was it just 25 years ahead of its time? Or was it at just the right time, and we delayed the future by 25 years because we’re dumbasses?
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@inthehands OTOH, Segways are fundamentally uncool.
People are very on board with electric scooters, which are technically sideways Segways. But cool.
@chris_evelyn
So says public opinion, anyway. We could live in a different world if style had gone a different way. -
This is what I’m saying! Was it just 25 years ahead of its time? Or was it at just the right time, and we delayed the future by 25 years because we’re dumbasses?
@inthehands well we’re definitely dumbasses so I’m inclined to agreeing with you
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I periodically think about the hype around the Segway, how luminary types were over the moon for it in private demos but then the general public decided it was uncool, and think maybe actually the luminaries had it right and it’s the public that biffed it.
@inthehands hm
Postulate: Segways were douchy. 117% hype. The POGO stick of the 00s. Immediately marked someone as an utter, irrecoverable dork.
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I think everyone was wrong on this one. The segway was ok, better than the public gave it credit for, but it was never gonna be a world changing technology. I think the public backlash was against the billionaires telling us what the fuck to do. It came out before the media collapse and the rise of social media and the rise of effective Russian propaganda that taught the billionaires how to do their own propaganda.
@dlakelan @inthehands The Segways at Google HQ were mostly parked when I arrived, but there was a large fleet of company bikes with baskets (like on an industrial campus or national laboratory), and company small electric scooters were popular for zipping from meeting to meeting across the growing office building footprint.
South of Market San Francisco is where I saw more of the personal folding scooters (the Xootr, kick not electric) and electric unicycles.
And Brompton folding cycles in folks' offices.
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@inthehands OTOH, Segways are fundamentally uncool.
People are very on board with electric scooters, which are technically sideways Segways. But cool.
@chris_evelyn @inthehands Didn't the Segway need massive active control to stay stable, as opposed to a e-scooter?
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I periodically think about the hype around the Segway, how luminary types were over the moon for it in private demos but then the general public decided it was uncool, and think maybe actually the luminaries had it right and it’s the public that biffed it.
@inthehands maybe but I still think they’re worse than a bicycle
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This is what I’m saying! Was it just 25 years ahead of its time? Or was it at just the right time, and we delayed the future by 25 years because we’re dumbasses?
@inthehands @Nicovel0 Kamen (I think that's the spelling) is a pariah to big industry. He's not a braggard. He creates things people need to move to a better future, and works at nearly a zero profit. Granted he's made money, but he also pays well and does a shit ton of zero profit charity. And he is not a sham. He holds the most pilot licenses of any non-military personal, has been commissioned as a test pilot. Had created a lot of tech for other govt's for free. He's not just living off of other people's brains and claiming false accolades.
He is the complete antithesis of the broligarchs.
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@inthehands hm
Postulate: Segways were douchy. 117% hype. The POGO stick of the 00s. Immediately marked someone as an utter, irrecoverable dork.
But per the posts above: look at micromobility, the current rise of scooters etc.
What if “douchy” was not an innate trait of the product, but something that a juvenile social consensus assigned to it?
What if that consensus was in part manufactured?
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@dlakelan @inthehands The Segways at Google HQ were mostly parked when I arrived, but there was a large fleet of company bikes with baskets (like on an industrial campus or national laboratory), and company small electric scooters were popular for zipping from meeting to meeting across the growing office building footprint.
South of Market San Francisco is where I saw more of the personal folding scooters (the Xootr, kick not electric) and electric unicycles.
And Brompton folding cycles in folks' offices.
@dlakelan @inthehands I admit to giving electric standing unicycles some side-eye as conspicuous flashy technology and was surprised to see one show up on the busy streets in my Seattle neighborhood.
But that seems to fall under "let people like what they like, just ride thoughtfully." The form seems about right for transit to origin and destination cases.
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I periodically think about the hype around the Segway, how luminary types were over the moon for it in private demos but then the general public decided it was uncool, and think maybe actually the luminaries had it right and it’s the public that biffed it.
@inthehands they were way too expensive and the width made then much less practical.
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@chris_evelyn @inthehands Didn't the Segway need massive active control to stay stable, as opposed to a e-scooter?
Sure. My invitation is to think about the Segway as a •direction• in product category, not a perfected single item. What could it have become if even 5% of the population embraced it?
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@inthehands maybe but I still think they’re worse than a bicycle
@aubilenon
I like bikes better too, but they require more skill / practice and a more physical abled rider. This: https://hachyderm.io/@inthehands/116466130920906169 -
@inthehands they were way too expensive and the width made then much less practical.
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But per the posts above: look at micromobility, the current rise of scooters etc.
What if “douchy” was not an innate trait of the product, but something that a juvenile social consensus assigned to it?
What if that consensus was in part manufactured?
@inthehands remarks: nah.
Never seen any utility on a Segway.
It was just the "box goes beep boop, woohoo", of that time.
Besides being undignified. I can not, absolutely, comprehensively take anyone on a Segway seriously.
Turns everyone into the chubby shopping mall rent-a-cop, at best.
The official bird of the Portlandia tv series.