CarsRocket Science

Uber Wants to Jump on Self-driving Bikes and Scooters

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It won’t be long now before you can leave your bike by the pole of a street light and enter a coffee shop, knowing that the low-battery two-wheeler would by itself find the nearest juice box and fill up itself in readiness for another use.

It may not be long too before electric bikes stop to lay around helplessly in cities, because Uber is making autonomous bikes and scooters happen.

The ridesharing company looks to hire people that will help develop autonomous scooter and bike technology. The catch is to build bikes that would be able to self-drive themselves to charging or better locations.

Last year, Uber acquired the bike-and-scooter-sharing startup Jump and has since then not fallen short of offering electric bikes and scooters under the New York-based dockless e-bike brand. The deal which was reported to have involved USD 200 Mn, didn’t come with much surprise, as both parties had already been collaborating on projects before then.

The effort to make self-driven bikes and scooters will be made under the same brand, while Uber works on a separate car project called the Uber Advanced Technology Group.

A major logistical challenge facing electric bike-sharing companies is how to keep the batteries of these gizmos charged.

A league of strategies has been employed to curb this problem, some of which involves employees driving around the city picking up bikes and getting them back to the charging stations.

Bird, a competitor of Jump, has experimented with paying people to collect scooters and charging them at home. The Atlantic’s Taylor Lorenz described how people signed up with the company to drive around their environments, picking up scooter in trucks to bring them back to their charging facility so they could get some juice.

While Jump announced last month that they were developing a new electric bike design, self-driven bikes and scooters are still obviously better than battery swaps. It will be more convenient for both the company and the users, and also potentially improve vehicle utilization.

Given the nuisance constituted by run-down electric bikes just lying around in cities, being able to find their way to a circuitry should do a solid for metropolis organization.

Over the course of the day or week, traffic patterns can culminate in an array of bikes in some areas and just a handful in others. Given that some bike-sharing companies send out van fleets to evenly spread their products, autonomous bikes could do this in a more efficient way without human assistance.

Explained: Why Does Electricity Go Off When it Starts Raining?

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