Minor design quibble. The "we'll keep you posted" banner that appeared after I submitted my e-mail does not fit in with the (otherwise very elegant) design of the rest of the page. #FFFFFF on #FF0000 out of nowhere is jarring.
Agreed, It also looks like it would be easily defeated by aluminum foil. I read about a phone thief that uses a faraday caged bag to snatch iPads and iPhones.[1]
Thieves are dumber than you think. One time, they stole my front bike wheel because it had a quick-release, but left the back wheel even though it also had a quick-release. (The back wheel is worth more because of the gearing system on it.)
Sigh, the idea has merit, this seems like its just a landing page to collect a mailing list of people who might buy one if you happen to make it.
Here is an "easy" answer, make a reflector with a simple RFID tag embedded in it. Make them look like all the reflectors you normally have on your bike. Create a repository for registering reflectors and give a free reader to every bike shop that wants to combat bike theft.
Will determined thieves swap all the reflectors? Sure. Does it raise the 'cost' of stealing a bike? Yes.
Alternative idea, put the tag in the bike seat. You can re-use pet tags, you can then re-use pet tag injectors and pet tag readers.
Bike thieves often strip the bike to the frame. Through dumb luck, I got back a bike that was almost nothing but a frame by that point. Reflectors and seats are easy to remove, something dropped into the frame would be really difficult to remove and bike thieves don't bother doing something like that.
This is a good idea, actually. Just taking email addresses for an idea might well still be sketchy but that's as may be. Someone should do this even if that someone doesn't my email in the meantime.
IANAL (and as far as I can see this isn't a real product), but..
While this phrase gets the message across very nicely, it is likely legally problematic.
Not only is it coat-tailing a trademark, but it is making a claim of superiority which is not a wise thing to do unless you have some strong objective proof.
Very interesting. I've been thinking about buying a topcap tracker from spybike-gps.com after my previous bike was stolen, but haven't committed yet as it's damn pricy. If you need any help testing or developing for it let me know. I'd be glad to give you a hand.
Had a nice napkin design to hook an old cellphone to an accelerometer to trigger text messages through a cheap plan, unfortunately I'm not an EE nor a hacker so it's only unicorns at this point.
This could be a nice national/college project, anyone coming with a cheap design could help a lot of people.
It's a great idea and it's one that I've had too. The hardest problem you have is pricing -- making it all inexpensive enough for it to be worth it for you and your target market. Is this a subscription / is this a one-time purchase / is this pay-per-use?
Price too high, and only high-end bikes will have it. And high-end bikes have smart thieves / are already stored safely, etc.
Otherwise, I can see how this would work. GPS, batteries, low-power design, goes inside your frame and is visually undetectable, M2M deal with jasper wireless (or sprint or whatever), etc. It'll take a while to make it reliable and have a great user experience, but its totally possible.
As someone who rides dual suspension bikes religiously on the north shore of vancouver bc, and has had expensive bikes stolen in the past, I would absolutely buy this for all of my bikes. Especially since it helps you to track the thief down. Nothing sucks more then bike thieves.
20 comments
[ 47.4 ms ] story [ 904 ms ] thread[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Booster_bag
If not posting to HN, where would you advise to post?
Here is an "easy" answer, make a reflector with a simple RFID tag embedded in it. Make them look like all the reflectors you normally have on your bike. Create a repository for registering reflectors and give a free reader to every bike shop that wants to combat bike theft.
Will determined thieves swap all the reflectors? Sure. Does it raise the 'cost' of stealing a bike? Yes.
Alternative idea, put the tag in the bike seat. You can re-use pet tags, you can then re-use pet tag injectors and pet tag readers.
This is a good idea, actually. Just taking email addresses for an idea might well still be sketchy but that's as may be. Someone should do this even if that someone doesn't my email in the meantime.
IANAL (and as far as I can see this isn't a real product), but..
While this phrase gets the message across very nicely, it is likely legally problematic.
Not only is it coat-tailing a trademark, but it is making a claim of superiority which is not a wise thing to do unless you have some strong objective proof.
This could be a nice national/college project, anyone coming with a cheap design could help a lot of people.
Price too high, and only high-end bikes will have it. And high-end bikes have smart thieves / are already stored safely, etc.
Otherwise, I can see how this would work. GPS, batteries, low-power design, goes inside your frame and is visually undetectable, M2M deal with jasper wireless (or sprint or whatever), etc. It'll take a while to make it reliable and have a great user experience, but its totally possible.
Good luck and make it happen!
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4444708
Don't steal bikes bro.