New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Wait until the self driving cars come out and they decide it is less dangerous to the occupant to run over a motorcycle than into a F150.
True, but at least the forests are pretty.
Well, I have to apologize for not having read this whole thread (I've been occupied), but I did do some keyword searching before posting...I think what's happening is that the average intelligence of motorcyclists is declining through time.I'll explain my theory, and then the evidence.Theory: In the 60's when I started riding, not much was known about motorcycle safety. Honda's campaign claiming you meet the nicest people was enough to convince many reasonable people to ride. Smart people bought motorcycles to do useful things, so they had luggage racks, sensible riding positions, room to pack a girlfriend, and adaptability for other opportunities that might come up.As time passed two things happened. First, more information about the relative danger of motorcycling versus car driving became available and was widely distributed. Smart people began to think twice about riding. Second, the conditions under which motorcycles operate became progressively worse, with more crowding and with increasingly armored, coddled, and electronics entranced drivers not giving a rat's posterior about us. Again, smart people began to think twice.The result, in my theory, is a decline in the average intelligence of motorcycle riders. Smart people don't do it as much, making the non-smart a predominant and growing majority. Evidence: The evidence is the motorcycles the remaining population choose. Instead of flexible, practical designs they pick road racers or Wild One sickles in huge proportions. The first are particularly stupid choices (and a main empirical buttress of my theory), but the second are also typically inferior as motorcycles to other designs, for any given task. By their choices ye shall know them. Stupid is as stupid does.Not all motorcyclists are stupid. You and I, for example, are smart. But the others are getting stupider and more confounding to the rest of us, on average, as time goes on. This explains everything.MotoP.S. Smart people have now moved more to scooters. Ironically, they're no safer. In time this will be understood and smart people will abandon them too. Then the remaining scooter riders will gravitate to Ruckuses and away from the more practical designs that now predominate. (Good theories make testable predictions.)M.
Yep, if it wasn't for Mr. N..
Smart people avoiding danger-so that's why all the donut shops went out of business.
I suspect all these differing anecdotal stories aren't really telling us much. In a nation of far over 300,000,000 the perspective of 20 guys who remember when you could still smoke on commercial airlines might not be particularly relevant?
They'll be right after the flying personal jet-packs. I read about it in a 1961 issue of Popular Science.Lannis
And the Dick Tracy watch huh?
Well, we finally got the watch this year in the form of Apple Watch
Nevertheless, every kid can fly a drone, computers in your pocket, the self driving car will be here too. The groundwork to make them acceptable is going on. They'll be here soon enough.
I really think the "self driving car" thing is a long way off. I know people are working on the idea, but I'm not sure why. Techies are just geeky like that, I guess. They have lots of variables to work out and program for, plus liability has to be worked out.In the 1960s, Star Trek's "communicators" and "Tricorders" seemed like way-out devices. Having wireless access to phone networks and computer networks! Now, everyone has a "tricorder" on their hip, in the form of a smart phone.I don't doubt that smart highways and self driving cars are part of the future. I just think it will be sometime after I've hung up my car keys for the last time.
Kev M is dead on here. My daughter's friends are entirely uninterested in motor sports. They do like their adrenalin thrills but get them skiing, rock climbing, kayaking, mountain biking. Their at-home time is absorbed in music, video and social media rather than tinkering in the garage. In our adolescence, competence with tools and mastery of horsepower were part of the passage to manhood. Maybe it's just my neck of the woods, but the culture seems to have outgrown that obsession. It may have something to do with the change in dating rituals. Kids travel and party in packs rather than doing the the pair-dating thing. They can hang out via handhelds instead of downtown. There may be more casual sex, earlier, because that seems to be part of the larger culture, but it's hard to prove and the impression may come from the openness about it. I think that if I'd been getting laid regularly at 17 I might not have felt quite so compelled to find my thrills on motorbikes.
Tiny pocket-sized computers that have more power than a building-sized mainframe computer of the 60's, that can communicate with satellites, locate you precisely, steer a tractor across a field and make perfect rows, allow you to speak "Who's that cute Indian actress that was in Slumdog Millionaires?" and within 5 seconds display her picture and biography .... NONE of that was predicted by anyone until it happened.
...flights to Jupiter on near-light-speed ion reaction drives, huge undersea cities...
I seriously doubt a vehicle that will always be paying attention to the road and will always without fail follow at correct stopping distances for the conditions will ever get itself into that situation. Certainly far less likely than been run over by bubba in his 150 after he's had a brew or six.
I agree. Google's self-driving cars (with human passenger/supervisors, I think) .....
I agree. Google's self-driving cars (with human passenger/supervisors, I think) have been circulating the streets of California for some time. Google reported that all of their very few accidents had been the fault of other drivers, often when the Google car did something unexpected but prescribed by law, like stopping at a stop sign. I drive like a Google car when I drive my car. Wish everyone did.
I'm going to bet that self driving cars will be here sooner than many think. You wouldn't need to own/maintain it. Just get on your comm device..whatever that is.. and a car shows up at your doorstep. Get in, tell it where to go, pop open a beer, and surf WG on the way. The technology is here, now.
Imagine the hacking opportunities. Tell all the self driving cars to avoid all the roads we like to ride on and problem solved. Imagine being able to head out on that great sweeper roads that goes for mikes and miles without worrying about some sled driver drifting over then line because they believe all those TV commercials about the ultimate driving machine.