Chargeride
Well-Known Member
Another Venice beach battery fire.
Im pretty sure he can afford one, have you seen his view count.Him being an MTB expert doesn't make him an ebike expert... Hard to understand it?
He misses a long time experience in e-bike systems; simply because he cannot afford e-bikes or has no sponsors to provide e-bikes to him. The Original Post is the proof.
Ah, I see now! These Specialized Pathfinder Pros are pretty popular on bikes like mine, but that narrow center slick has traction issues in emergency stops on smooth pavement and on steep offroad descents. But being a brittle old guy with spinal hardware, I'm kind of a chicken on the latter.The tread, middle, edge side and a nice tan sidewa..oh dear its died under explanation![]()
Ironic, since I addressed that. Obviously, no point in reading anything on this forum, since none of us are experts.Him being an MTB expert doesn't make him an ebike expert... Hard to understand it?
I guess we both know more about e-bikes than Seth would ever knowIronic, since I addressed that. Obviously, no point in reading anything on this forum, since none of us are experts.![]()
It is not about riding. How do you describe a guy whose first action post buying an e-bike is opening the battery?Unless you are just trying to make it complicated, it is hard to see how normal mountain biking expertise does not translate to riding an e-mtb well. Bluntly I am skeptical that any of the subtleties wouldn't be quickly picked up by a good mountain biker, probably in the first half hour of riding the bike.
Maybe... Maybe not. Seth's a big Specialized guy and his wife rides a Vado.I guess we both know more about e-bikes than Seth would ever know
It is not about riding. How do you describe a guy whose first action post buying an e-bike is opening the battery?
My description is "a clueless amateur".
For me that's proof enough that he's aMaybe... Maybe not. Seth's a big Specialized guy and his wife rides a Vado.
I think given all of the quality problems with e-bike batteries and the ugly history there that is a reasonable thing to tear down.It is not about riding. How do you describe a guy whose first action post buying an e-bike is opening the battery?
My description is "a clueless amateur".
None of the scenarios discusses torque * cadence?Try asking chatgpt to write you a youtube suitable script for discussing variou
You really are surrendering to the hype machine there. You ought to keep in mind that the loudest advocates for this future are also trying to jack their share price and make a lot of money.It was merely an egg sample.
We have scrapped the entire knowledge of humanity and put it in a language model that is gaining exponential ' intelligence' individual knowledge and experience will be irrelevent within ten years
I'd like to see him tearing down a battery on his brand new LevoI think given all of the quality problems with e-bike batteries and the ugly history there that is a reasonable thing to tear down.
I personally would like to see side-by-side teardowns between quality e-bikes and cheap Chinese deathtraps. In particular I'd like to see disassembly of the electronics and the battery. But also they should show if the brakes, drivetrain, and other parts are appropriate for a heavier pedal assist bike. We all know a lot of manufacturers who should know better take shortcuts on components.
It is grossly overhyped, but in reality it is beavering away to replace everything.You really are surrendering to the hype machine there. You ought to keep in mind that the loudest advocates for this future are also trying to jack their share price and make a lot of money.
Seriously, we are taking just the first baby steps here. And given the current directions baby is walking I am doubtful any kind of artificial general intelligence or artificial super intelligence is possible or practical no matter how much time or money is thrown at the problem. That doesn't mean there won't be useful and valuable applications and large fortunes made. But our Machine Overlords haven't yet made their appearance.
On those practical applications, right now very few people are even looking in the right places.
For that Artificial Super Intelligence to happen, a large number of other pieces need to be invented. And no, we don't know how many pieces or what they even are. So I suspect it is going to take a while.
Once a critical mass of systems communicate on an accepted standard, then it will propogate exponentially.
No, most AIs are trained on subsets of the internet at a particular time. If you want more current stuff you have to retrain the whole network at enormous cost.At the moment its just an epic search engine that humanises the results, but
YOU: Can you show me how to do <this> and <that>
AI: <gives wrong and weird answer>
YOU: That's wrong. You need to do it differently. <gives an example>
AI: <gives a still-wrong but somewhat better answer>
YOU: That's a little better. Here are some more examples: <give more examples>
AI: <finally gives a halfway decent answer>
Palantir is more of a data science and analysis company that is rebranding itself as AI to take advantage of the hype. "Data science" is AIs geeky and awkward older sister. Palantir is also the prototypical example of creepy AI. I see a whole universe of useful non-creepy applications that I'd like to see us exploit first.The actual king of AI is named after the glass seeing balls from LOTR.
He must have bought it from Seth Berm Peak