Looks lovely! Have you tried washing it before? I’d be very curious about yield and quality of hash.
Looks lovely! Have you tried washing it before? I’d be very curious about yield and quality of hash.
Legally speaking sure. I’ve never seen that enforced though so I wouldn’t be particularly concerned about the legality of it.
The plugin is just called “git” it comes with ohmyzsh out of the box. You just have to enable it in your zshrc.
Are you able to fall back to normal git commands if you don’t know the shortcuts? This sounds awesome until I can’t remember the syntax to do something I don’t do everyday.
Ohmyzsh with the git plugin is my fave -
gaa & gcmsg "a commit"
feels like the right level of verbosity for me.
Safety gear isn’t a bad idea, but registration and insurance don’t make sense to me - if I’m on a 100lb vehicle on a road where everyone else is in a 4000lb vehicle it doesn’t make sense why I would need liability coverage. And I’m not damaging the roads the way cars/trucks do so it doesn’t make any sense to me to pay anything to the state/country for registration.
You’re not wrong but public transit here sucks. Every weekend I go to a friend’s house - by car it is 1 hour every time. By train it is somewhere between 2.5 and 3 hours depending on delays. Public transport (even when poorly implemented) offers a great way to get in/out of medium to large cities, but isn’t really ideal for trips from one rural area outside the city to another. What would be much more convenient would be if I could bring an ebike on the train with me. Most of the distance on this trip is covered by a 1h train ride, and it’s just the busses on either end which are slow and unreliable. Unfortunately they don’t allow electric bikes at all, and normal bikes are only allowed during certain hours.
My guy you shouldn’t have visited New Jersey… In all seriousness though, this is at least partly satirical right? There are definitely some tough spots in America like most places, but when I went to Europe and Scandinavia it was about the same.
Ariel riders look pretty great! How is it to pedal? Geometry wise it looks like it would be hard to get much power out of pedaling it. I would seriously think about buying a used rider to steal the drive train out of though, seems like they have a nice powerful platform and lots of customization options on the aftermarket.
Awesome bike! I have an E-mountain bike and really enjoy it. For this application, I’m not sure if the mountain bike design will give me enough efficiency to hit the range I need. Maybe with narrower street tires and mostly locking out the suspension, but that removes most of the mountain bike advantages IMO.
Really appreciate your thorough answer! I’ll definitely think about an electric motorcycle. IMO if I’m going to go through licensing, I might as well get something that goes full car speed.
I think you’re right that battery capacity would be the biggest issue building out an ebike. That said, a big frame triangle can fit a lot of cells. Something like 3000Wh could probably get the job done. If I could get the bike aerodynamic enough to cruise on a 750w motor, then max range would be 3000/750=4 hours or 140 miles. Obviously won’t hit that in real world conditions, but 70 would be possible.
I terms of legality and ethics, I totally agree about treating cyclists and pedestrians with respect - on my current ebike I keep it under 18MPH on bike paths and slow to pass others at a safe speed. My vision for this bike is more rural back roads near my house which are mostly empty but have an occasional car passing by. I’m not a big fan of laws generally. On that front I’ll probably run a cracked controller with a toggle so if I get pulled over I can put it back in legal mode with a keypad sequence. Slap some aliexpress “250 watt” and “class 2” stickers on it and trust that the local cops are few and otherwise occupied. Where I live folks rip illegal dirt bikes and ATVs on public roads with impunity so I can’t imagine this being a big problem.
Yeah definitely no bike paths unless you keep it under like 18mph imo. This would be for rural roads.
That’s fair, but what is the limiting factor? Frame geometry? Power? I downhill mountain bike and regularly hit 45 on open sections. I think if the motor could keep up the bike would be fine.
Vespas here need registration, insurance, etc. etc. That would solve the range issue though.
If balance isn’t a problem I’d recommend a small electric cargo bike. I have a relative who uses a mobility scooter, but it has all kinds of issues and is very slow. I built her an ebike and she really enjoys using it instead. It sucks but wheelchairs have a stigma that a bike doesn’t. Also med device regulations kinda suck (at least in the USA) and EBikes get around those.
There’s definitely a lot of hate for e-motos among mountain bikers. IMO it all depends how it’s ridden. If you turn down the power level and just cruise, you’re not damaging the trail and it shouldn’t be a bug deal. If you’re giving it the beans and making ruts then that ruins the trail for everyone else and is definitely a dick move.
For better or for worse he’s got a lot of friends within openai. Sounds like many of them have threatened to resign if he’s gone. If he goes and starts a competing company without the ethical guardrails, I think it’s likely a lot of folks will follow him. He also has very tight ties to the investing community so he would likely be able to raise funds quickly. I think there’s a solid chance he could make a credible competitor to openai within the next 5 years, especially if they lose talent/money over this.
Fair point. The production emissions make a huge difference. As best I understand batteries still have very high production emissions which roughly balances out their lower runtime emissions.
Agreed. That’s one of the big benefits of cheap bikes currently - cheap, available parts that work in a wide range of bikes. There’s always been proprietary shit though, this particular tech isn’t new in that regard.