I saw a yellow one yesterday at the supermarket shopping center but it looked out of place.
It wasn't right in front of the supermarket entrance, it was toward the side and end of the parking lot, on the grass, under a tree.
I also work in the mockingbird area. Lots of streetwalkers and their security people riding those bikes up n down mockingbird. I've even seen a large pile of the bikes at a bus stop on Irving Blvd. I have ridden my own bike to that QT Store, sure glad I have a good lock! Originally Posted by 200K
These guys just throw stuff out there or have they thought through everything?Well, I took a look at limebike.com just to pick one. They're in 67 US cities and a few in Europe. The company started in Seattle (imagine that). Took a look at forbes.com and search limebike, there are a bunch of articles about this trend, and found the company was valued at $225 million as of last October. So yeah, I'd say they've given this thing some thought.
Battery problem? You ride it and all of the sudden you lose power and have to ditch the scooter.
Liability issue? Someone cracks their skull. Who is responsible. How do they do the waiver thing? Originally Posted by dallasfan
I think most of these bike shares companies are owned by different companies in China.Hey, don't knock it unless you've been there recently. The Chinese know how to move people around in large numbers. The train and subway systems are superb with top-notch equipment. The airlines I've been on are at least as good as American, and Hainan Airlines is a 5* airline. The airports are great with a lot of new terminals (except that Shanghai Pudong needs more gates to handle the traffic). Customer service is generally superb on airlines, in hotels, and in stores. AND they know how to make this bike sharing thing work. Sure, you can still buy cheap junk there, but from my observations "made in China" doesn't mean what it used to.
You know... made in China...
a sure sign of quality and reliability and safety. Originally Posted by CG2014