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Elmoto HR2 – German Designed Electric Motorcycle

by Jay Garrett on January 5, 2010

If the cost of public transport in this glorious capital keeps increasing then it may be time to find alternatives.

Apparently Boris wants us to cycle more – I’m all for being fit just not for being sweaty at the start of the day!

I’ve mentioned a variety of electric bikes on here from street legal Super Moto’s, an electric GP styled sports bike, and even an electric unicycle sportsbike thing.

If you’re looking for simplicity and purity of design though the Elmoto HR2 might be more up your commuter corridor.

The German designed HR2 is a lightweight battery bike that will whizz you about town at around 30mph.

You get sports suspension and disc brakes and with a high speed charger you can recharge the 25Ah battery to 80% in 2 hours and a full charge costs you about €0.70 and will take you 45 miles according to the Elmoto bean counters.

Expect to fork out around €3350 for one. Read more at Elmoto’s site.

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Freerunner – Truly Free Wi-Fi in Your Area

by Jay Garrett on May 20, 2009

freerunnerGenuine free Wi-Fi is thin on the ground…. errr….. air.

Those places that do offer ‘free wi-fi’ will stand over you until you buy a coffee, beer or bun.

That could be about to change with the introduction of Freerunner.

Freerunner has been thought-up by Owen Geddes, one of the people responsible for The Cloud network.

No need for a subscription as Freerunner is a solution for the UK, offering free to use access points in venues geared towards the community.

I’m talkin bout libraries (the few that are left), transport hubs (stations), community centres and schools.

Freerunner is also offering its Wi-Fi solution to commercial venues too for a charge – but a charge that’s just a third of the current rate set by other operators.

That means you can stop after that sixth extra-large-double-whip-caramel-macchiato.

‘Back in 2002, free, open access points were popping up all over the place and there was a real buzz about the potential of public Wi-Fi,’ says Owen Geddes, CEO of Freerunner. ‘Since then, networks have been locked down and access for a day can cost more than your home broadband costs in a month. Our vision is to give consumers free public Wi-Fi access whether they are in the the centre of London, the community centre at the end of their road or the local café in Hartlepool.’

The Freerunner network is based on Open Source technology, with distributed network architecture, no data centres and no single point of failure, which should mean reliability, a faster connection and a low operating cost.

The north east of the country will be the first to get in on the action.

If Freerunner takes off, which it really should, expect to see it down your street very soon.

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UK Flat Flexible Loudspeakers (FFL) To Bring Clarity to Train Announcements

April 6, 2009 Click to read more →
Thumbnail image for UK Flat Flexible Loudspeakers (FFL) To Bring Clarity to Train Announcements

Nope – I’m not about to start rambling on about a new development in oven-ready meals that utilises a funky tin foil interface.
That bit of foil is the future of public address speakers.
Soon, hopefully, announcements on train platforms and other public places will become crystal clear instead of that mumbling annoyance that we currently have [...]

Quake Live Goes Live Tomorrow!

February 23, 2009 Click to read more →

Remember when I said that invites for testing the Quake Live closed Beta were being sent out?
Well, now QUAKE LIVE will be available to the general public as an open beta on Tuesday, February 24th!
That means Monday morning (U.S. central time) beta.quakelive.com will go down for about 36 hours and then opening to the public at www.quakelive.com on Tuesday [...]

Google Maps Add Public Transport Routes

January 14, 2009 Click to read more →

Put paid to those confused looks when you catch the tube and change for one stop only to discover that it would have actually been quicker to walk.
Sorry – but the tube lines aren’t as neat as the stylised tube map everyone is used to.
Google Maps now has a ‘Transit’ layer under the ‘More’ tab.
In [...]