Dockless Bike Sharing
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Dockless Bike Sharing
Most of the news I see/read about dockless bike-sharing involves some focus on it as a nuisance to be regulated. Now I see this article about one company withdrawing from the US and several other national markets because of regulatory obstructions, and I wonder if dockless bike and/or scooter sharing will actually be able to establish itself everywhere (inside and outside US markets) or whether regulations will determine who will have access to dockless sharing and who will be restricted from it as a transportation choice.
https://money.cnn.com/2018/07/19/tec...-us/index.html
What is your expectation? Will dockless bike and scooter sharing technology be a free option for everyone everywhere or will the world end up being divided into places where it is and isn't allowed by regulations?
https://money.cnn.com/2018/07/19/tec...-us/index.html
What is your expectation? Will dockless bike and scooter sharing technology be a free option for everyone everywhere or will the world end up being divided into places where it is and isn't allowed by regulations?
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I've read plenty about the problems dockless bike shares cause, and I have not yet read about a dockless system that does not cause these problems. Maybe there are solutions, but they aren't here yet. NYC has just allowed a trial of one company, far outside the service area of Citi Bike. We will see.
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I've read plenty about the problems dockless bike shares cause, and I have not yet read about a dockless system that does not cause these problems. Maybe there are solutions, but they aren't here yet. NYC has just allowed a trial of one company, far outside the service area of Citi Bike. We will see.
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@tandempower, what do you think I’m saying? You might be mistaken.
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“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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#5
Prefers Cicero
Most of the news I see/read about dockless bike-sharing involves some focus on it as a nuisance to be regulated. Now I see this article about one company withdrawing from the US and several other national markets because of regulatory obstructions, and I wonder if dockless bike and/or scooter sharing will actually be able to establish itself everywhere (inside and outside US markets) or whether regulations will determine who will have access to dockless sharing and who will be restricted from it as a transportation choice.
https://money.cnn.com/2018/07/19/tec...-us/index.html
What is your expectation? Will dockless bike and scooter sharing technology be a free option for everyone everywhere or will the world end up being divided into places where it is and isn't allowed by regulations?
https://money.cnn.com/2018/07/19/tec...-us/index.html
What is your expectation? Will dockless bike and scooter sharing technology be a free option for everyone everywhere or will the world end up being divided into places where it is and isn't allowed by regulations?
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/03/bike-share-oversupply-in-china-huge-piles-of-abandoned-and-broken-bicycles/556268/
Last edited by cooker; 07-19-18 at 03:45 PM.
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Since it has, in fact, proven itself to be a nuisance, it is appropriate that it be regulated. I don't want my yard being used as a drop off point, I don't want people riding unsafe bikes and I don't want the state to have to pay for cleanup if people abandon the bikes all over the place.
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/20...cycles/556268/
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/20...cycles/556268/
But given all this, do you think the problems will be ironed out and everyone will have access to dockless bike sharing in a few years, or do you think it's going to boil down to docking locations having to be negotiated with property owners, codes, zoning, etc.? I can imagine that we're going to have to go through the same kind of things we've been through with all the other sharing companies, such as Uber and Airbnb, where the industries that perceive them as a threat look for every means possible to stop and/or discredit them. It amazes me how people are always talking about the free market, but yet it's so difficult for a product to simply be made available to the public and used.
So do you think the glitches will be ironed out, how long do you think it will take, and what will the end result look like, iyo?
#7
Prefers Cicero
I doubt any competing interests are quashing dockless bikes here. I suspect it's just that most of North America isn't fertile ground for this type of innovation. You need a large city and it has to be quite bike-friendly and it probably also has to have a lot of tourists because many of the locals who ride in the city already have bikes and you need tourists to make up some of the users. You would need to saturate the area with thousands of bikes, all with GPS or something, so everybody would always be able to find one, and you would probably need to have some paid staff to continuously redistribute them after they all ended up in popular spots.You'd need to regularly check them for tire pressure and general maintenance and safety issues. it would be a lot more expensive than for docked bike because at least in that case, you know that a bunch of them are all going to be in one place.
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Since it has, in fact, proven itself to be a nuisance, it is appropriate that it be regulated. I don't want my yard being used as a drop off point, I don't want people riding unsafe bikes and I don't want the state to have to pay for cleanup if people abandon the bikes all over the place.
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/03/bike-share-oversupply-in-china-huge-piles-of-abandoned-and-broken-bicycles/556268/
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/03/bike-share-oversupply-in-china-huge-piles-of-abandoned-and-broken-bicycles/556268/
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I doubt any competing interests are quashing dockless bikes here. I suspect it's just that most of North America isn't fertile ground for this type of innovation. You need a large city and it has to be quite bike-friendly and it probably also has to have a lot of tourists because many of the locals who ride in the city already have bikes and you need tourists to make up some of the users. You would need to saturate the area with thousands of bikes, all with GPS or something, so everybody would always be able to find one, and you would probably need to have some paid staff to continuously redistribute them after they all ended up in popular spots.You'd need to regularly check them for tire pressure and general maintenance and safety issues. it would be a lot more expensive than for docked bike because at least in that case, you know that a bunch of them are all going to be in one place.
1. Solid tires so no tire pressure worries
2. Plenty of bikes with GPS sprinkled around the city. I was a 30 min (by bike from downtown) and had no problem finding bikes.
3. App supports maintenance reports. One of my bikes wouldn't shift into 3rd gear.
No idea if it's a sustainable business model but I appreciated the opportunity to hop on a bike and head downtown for dinner on a bike.
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A town where I used to live decided to get a bunch of bicycles, paint them some hideous colour, and leave them around town with the idea that people could just grab a bike and cycle to their destination, and drop them off there.
IIRC, most of them ended up in ditches, the river, broken up in back alleys, etc. In something like 6 months, they were all gone.
IIRC, most of them ended up in ditches, the river, broken up in back alleys, etc. In something like 6 months, they were all gone.
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People pay to ride docked bicycles.
People don't pay anything to ride dockless bicycles.
And you can be charged large amounts of money if you keep a docked bike too long or do damage to it.
The Melbourne Bike Share site says this:
If you fail to return your bike to a dock within 24 hours of hiring you are liable for a $500 charge.
Whereas you can hurl a dockless bike into the nearest swamp if you want and no one will find you or charge you or anything.
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#12
Prefers Cicero
People pay to ride docked bicycles.
People don't pay anything to ride dockless bicycles.
And you can be charged large amounts of money if you keep a docked bike too long or do damage to it.
The Melbourne Bike Share site says this:
If you fail to return your bike to a dock within 24 hours of hiring you are liable for a $500 charge.
Whereas you can hurl a dockless bike into the nearest swamp if you want and no one will find you or charge you or anything.
People don't pay anything to ride dockless bicycles.
And you can be charged large amounts of money if you keep a docked bike too long or do damage to it.
The Melbourne Bike Share site says this:
If you fail to return your bike to a dock within 24 hours of hiring you are liable for a $500 charge.
Whereas you can hurl a dockless bike into the nearest swamp if you want and no one will find you or charge you or anything.
I think the idea with commercial dockless bikes is they would have some kind of automatic wheel lock you could unlock with an app, and your use would be logged and billed. Hopefully if you parked it and someone else then threw it in the river you wouldn't be blamed.
Last edited by cooker; 07-20-18 at 05:44 AM.
#13
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With Citi Bike, they know who undocked a bike, so you have good reason to dock it quickly. If you don't return it, they charge you $1,200.
I don't know why that doesn't work with dockless bikes, honestly. Don't the credit card users leave a trace of their identities? In other words, I don't know why people are dumping dockless bikes.
I don't know why that doesn't work with dockless bikes, honestly. Don't the credit card users leave a trace of their identities? In other words, I don't know why people are dumping dockless bikes.
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Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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People pay to ride docked bicycles.
People don't pay anything to ride dockless bicycles.
And you can be charged large amounts of money if you keep a docked bike too long or do damage to it.
The Melbourne Bike Share site says this:
If you fail to return your bike to a dock within 24 hours of hiring you are liable for a $500 charge.
Whereas you can hurl a dockless bike into the nearest swamp if you want and no one will find you or charge you or anything.
People don't pay anything to ride dockless bicycles.
And you can be charged large amounts of money if you keep a docked bike too long or do damage to it.
The Melbourne Bike Share site says this:
If you fail to return your bike to a dock within 24 hours of hiring you are liable for a $500 charge.
Whereas you can hurl a dockless bike into the nearest swamp if you want and no one will find you or charge you or anything.
Imo, the police should do more to enforce laws against vandalism if these bikes are getting trashed. It should be possible to place some in spots with a security camera to catch the vandal, the same way security cameras are used in stores to catch shoplifters. You wouldn't have to monitor every share-bike like this, but if you placed a few security cameras here and there and people didn't know where they are and where they aren't, you could catch and prosecute the vandals and then put stickers on the bikes saying that they are monitored for security and vandalism will be prosecuted.
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Yes the free dockless bikes have a high attrition rate.
I think the idea with commercial dockless bikes is they would have some kind of automatic wheel lock you could unlock with an app, and your use would be logged and billed. Hopefully if you parked it and someone else then threw it in the river you wouldn't be blamed.
I think the idea with commercial dockless bikes is they would have some kind of automatic wheel lock you could unlock with an app, and your use would be logged and billed. Hopefully if you parked it and someone else then threw it in the river you wouldn't be blamed.
#16
Prefers Cicero
With Citi Bike, they know who undocked a bike, so you have good reason to dock it quickly. If you don't return it, they charge you $1,200.
I don't know why that doesn't work with dockless bikes, honestly. Don't the credit card users leave a trace of their identities? In other words, I don't know why people are dumping dockless bikes.
I don't know why that doesn't work with dockless bikes, honestly. Don't the credit card users leave a trace of their identities? In other words, I don't know why people are dumping dockless bikes.
#17
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What happened in China was that a few companies went in very aggressively to try to saturate the market and get market share early on, and they put in tens of thousands of bikes and then the companies lost track of them or went out of business and the abandoned bikes were littered everywhere and became a huge cleanup burden for the local governments. However here there isn't a big enough market for them to do that kind of overkill dumping of bikes into any city.
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With Citi Bike, they know who undocked a bike, so you have good reason to dock it quickly. If you don't return it, they charge you $1,200.
I don't know why that doesn't work with dockless bikes, honestly. Don't the credit card users leave a trace of their identities? In other words, I don't know why people are dumping dockless bikes.
I don't know why that doesn't work with dockless bikes, honestly. Don't the credit card users leave a trace of their identities? In other words, I don't know why people are dumping dockless bikes.
If the company doesn’t have people driving around to get the bikes from out of the way places they are easy targets for anyone not looking to ride one . Who could the company charge if the bike turned up missing?
#19
You gonna eat that?
Because they're in a docking station, not some random seedy part of town. And while they're not in a docking station, they are in the care of a specific person with a credit card. If there's deliberate abuse/damage, it gets billed to that person, so they make sure it doesn't happen and that they've properly docked the bike when they're done.
#20
You gonna eat that?
#21
You gonna eat that?
Yes the free dockless bikes have a high attrition rate.
I think the idea with commercial dockless bikes is they would have some kind of automatic wheel lock you could unlock with an app, and your use would be logged and billed. Hopefully if you parked it and someone else then threw it in the river you wouldn't be blamed.
I think the idea with commercial dockless bikes is they would have some kind of automatic wheel lock you could unlock with an app, and your use would be logged and billed. Hopefully if you parked it and someone else then threw it in the river you wouldn't be blamed.
#22
You gonna eat that?
Because you can end your rental without locking the bike to a fixed point. So the bike gets left somewhere and random person picks it up (while it's still locked) and dumps in a canal or hangs it from a tree or drops it off an overpass.
#23
You gonna eat that?
Imo, the police should do more to enforce laws against vandalism if these bikes are getting trashed. It should be possible to place some in spots with a security camera to catch the vandal, the same way security cameras are used in stores to catch shoplifters. You wouldn't have to monitor every share-bike like this, but if you placed a few security cameras here and there and people didn't know where they are and where they aren't, you could catch and prosecute the vandals and then put stickers on the bikes saying that they are monitored for security and vandalism will be prosecuted.
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Because they're in a docking station, not some random seedy part of town. And while they're not in a docking station, they are in the care of a specific person with a credit card. If there's deliberate abuse/damage, it gets billed to that person, so they make sure it doesn't happen and that they've properly docked the bike when they're done.
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It's not the fault of the business when vandals attack the bikes. It wouldn't matter whether the bikes are privately owned or share bikes, vandalism is vandalism. Car alarms are from an age before security cameras were cheap and plentiful. Nowadays it shouldn't be too difficult to place security cams in various public areas and then designate at least some of them as video-surveillance areas, while others would not be designated in order to maintain a sense of uncertainty about where such cams are placed and where not. This is actually an issue that goes far beyond share bikes, but there are plenty of property owners who should be more than happy to have security cams put on their property and it should generate some extra income for them because there are a lot more reasons than share bikes to have such cameras around, e.g. securing areas so that businesses can attract more customers, making residential areas safer, etc. If vandalism doesn't disappear on its own, surveillance in public areas is needed to police it.