Sadly all forums are dying. I have participated in many for years & years but few new users are joining as everyone uses Facebook groups nowadays even though they are vastly inferior.Little wonder that we've lost so many of our most valuable members, leaving in disgust at the posts of the increasing number of wilfully offensive members.
And why this forum is dying on its feet with hardly any input. Given the immense increase in e-biking over the two years of the pandemic, we should be flooded with input traffic and new members and the forum should be thriving.
Indeed Nigel, as Soundwave commented earlier and I see in another site I use regularly. But I see this one as particularly hit. Given the huge growth of e-biking and cycling in general in 2020, '21 and '22, the lack of input traffic is extraordinary.Sadly all forums are dying. I participated in many for years but few new users are joining as everyone uses Facebook groups nowadays even though they are vastly inferior.
Don't be lulled into thinking you're not involved with Facebook. That's true even if you don't to your knowledge have a Facebook account, as it's built into many devices at a hardware or firmware level, and you trigger being assigned a notional identity the moment it accesses the internet. There are 28 trackers before you log into this forum and 131 after you do. Rest asssured, it all contributes to a mosaic to be data mined later, no matter how anonymous it seems. You data will never be deleted, even when this forum and Facebook are long dead.Sadly all forums are dying. I have participated in many for years & years but few new users are joining as everyone uses Facebook groups nowadays even though they are vastly inferior.
We all know timid people, who surprise by driving like demons. It's the same when people with unresolved issues are allowed a mask to access the internet. Responses to other people on social media in all it's forms, which of course includes forums and some surveys, tends toward the extreme. There are unnecessary and unwarranted insults, for example. I expect such will continue."Panorama's Internet survey; a sampling of a population more likely to be composed of nasty lonely unhappy people looking for someone to blame. They shouldn't be allowd anywhere near a keyboard or mouse, let alone the internet."
Where did the basis of that take come from?
Perhaps, like badgers, they would be best humanely culled. Until they develop a vaccine of course. I'm not that heartless.We all know timid people, who surprise by driving like demons. It's the same when people with unresolved issues are allowed a mask to access the internet. Responses to other people on social media in all it's forms, which of course includes forums and some surveys, tends toward the extreme. There are unnecessary and unwarranted insults, for example. I expect such will continue.
Wild badger behaviour won't change much either
(Spam link removed by admin)in a bike lane is cyclists’ official lane without competing with other motorists. Motorists are expected to yield to the biker when passing through a bike lane.if motorists and cyclists cross or enter a bike lane, the motorist should give way or yield to the biker by default. It also applies in situations when both parties need to turn right. In this case, the motorist must exercise caution, especially when the cyclist is directly going straight through the intersection or at roundabouts.
Please be aware that the linked site in Gary's post is of US origin and is incorrect for Britain in some details. For example the following extracts are incorrect:(Spam link removed by admin”in a bike lane is cyclists’ official lane without competing with other motorists. Motorists are expected to yield to the biker when passing through a bike lane.
I agree. I dont know what model Leaf you have, but my one with the current body style has the same restriction on visibility. I've developed the habit of doing double takes at danger points such a entering roundabouts, also physically leaning back and forward to change the view.I worry about other drivers who also have these large "A" pillars on their vehicles. In the Nissan Leaf's case I believe it is inherently dangerous, more so than other newer vehicles.
This problem was largely solved many years ago in the USA and to an extent here, with wraparound screens. Unfortunately the change from toughened glass to laminated made wraparound impossible, contributing to the current problem.I drove small vans for years before my ebike came along, Transit Connect then Fiat Doblo, and routinely found it necessary to be altering head position even just in bends to have an adequate view of the road.