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bikeshd.co.uk  

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“A guy in our office had his bike stolen and spent days scouring ebay and gumtree to try and find it. As a web developer, he decided there was a better way to do this so has designed a site that amalgamates all of the bikes for sale in London daily on ebay and gumtree. If you have your bike stolen, go to his site where you’ll be able to easily search for the bike and see if anyone’s selling it, and you’ll be able to call the police or confront the person etc.” – thanks Will!

http://bikeshd.co.uk/

from shop14 blog

Stylish bike stands in Wrocław, Poland  

The stands are a creative approach to bicycle parking in the city of Wrocław, Poland. Each one features a cast steel design, and is bolted to the ground.

The first stand, which has a curving structure and two integrated hoops, promotes a more secure locking practice. The bicycle frame and both wheels can be locked through the hoops of the bike stand.

The bicycle shaped stand is less secure, as it only allows one wheel and the frame to be locked to the curve of the stand.

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Bait Bikes  

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Photograph: Frederika Whitehead/guardian.co.uk

Police forces around the country are to deploy bait bikes after a series of successful pilot schemes throughout 2008 and 2009, with London’s mayor, Boris Johnson, also approving the tactic for the capital earlier this month.

‘Bait bikes’ or decoy or tracker bikes, are positioned by police in theft hot-spots. They are intentionally badly locked, or even unlocked, and are fitted with hidden GPS devices, letting officers trace them to the thieves, or better still to a lock-up or warehouse used by gangs to store lots of stolen bikes.

For more info, check out this article from The Guardian.

First cycle hire docking scheme in Southwark  

The first docking station for the new TFL bicycle hire scheme has been installed in the city. Southwark Street is home to 36 new cycle hire docks before the scheme rolls out on the 31st July.

The site is close to London Bridge tube station, and in walking distance of Borough Market.

Cycle Hire Dock dscf1870

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Nokia mobile phone charger for bikes  

Nokia is developing a bicycle powered mobile phone charger for its handsets. The device, consisting of charger unit, handlebar mount, dynamo, and 2mm charger jack, will be priced around €15 and should be available at the of the year.

Nokia says that 10 minutes of pedalling at 6mph (10kph) is enough to power 28 minutes of talk time or 37 hours of standby.

The kit could be useful as a sat nav system for bicycles, using Nokia’s Ovi Maps turn-by-turn directions, without having to worry about running out of battery on longer rides.

Nokia Charger

Nokia bike charger

Helmets that stink when damaged  

Researchers at Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute have created bicycle helmet that stinks when damaged.

Helmet manufacturers state that once the helmet becomes cracked, the integrity of the helmet safety structure is compromised and becomes less effective.

Fraunhofer have come up with a process that injects microcapsules of malodorous oils into the helmet itself, causing it to smell when damaged, thus alerting the user that it’s time to replace it.

Fraunhofer helmet

Fraunhofer Helmet

Don’t steal wheels bro. By the dont steal bikes bro crew  

“My friend had his wheels stolen. A week later, the guy who looks after the building next to his turns up with his wheels. And my friend finds this on YouTube of the same guy stealing them!”

Don't Steel Wheels Bro ..

London Cycle Hire scheme bikes introduced  

Click here to see short videos:


Londond Cycle Hire bike

Image source: www.independent.co.uk

Is it a folding bike? Is it a Segway? Is it the future? Well, it’s a Yike!  

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This is the YIKEBIKE, designed by New Zealander Grant Ryan with engineer Peter Higgins, both based in London.

It does fold but it’s not strictly a bicycle since you can’t pedal it with you legs; it is powered via a hi-tech motor and rechargeable batteries but its not a Segway since it won’t balance itself. In fact, the balancing act on a Yikebike means teaching most cyclists new tricks, since to ride it you have your hands by your sides and your legs in front of you (sounds scary in London traffic, but we’re open to being shown otherwise!).

Th YikeBike brand has emerged with the first production model, from a concept the creators have coined as the Mini-Farthing. It plays on the idea of a small re-invention of the age-old bicycle, offering lightweight two-wheeled transport in a compact and foldable format, with the option of an electric motor and ABS brakes, to boot!

This intial version, being made of carbon fibre weighs about 22lbs/ 10kg, comparable to the likes of a Brompton and many other folding bicycles, so is feasible to carry on to buses, trains etc. It is less clear how easy it is to carry other things with you while you ride, since there appear to be no luggage supports and a weighted backpack may be a shift to far for your newly found balance.

The website promotes that thieves can get ‘yiked’, on the premise that you take it wherever you go, but if urban transport is about getting you around the city, how safe is your Yike when you want to stop in a bar or a cafe when to meet friends or colleages? Or would you feel safe even about nipping out of the office while it is charging under your desk? Funky and light as the YikeBike may be, it currently carries no obvious security against theft and while sporting a price tag of around £3,000, that jewell-like finish may be just too tempting for some.

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See videos of Yikebike here.

Can Nokia’s capture Bicycle Thieves?  

Bikeoff were recently sent following, found on the ‘Welcome to Optimism’ blog: http://wklondon.typepad.com/welcome_to_optimism/2009/09/nokia-and-the-bicycle-thieves.html

Nokia captures but loses bike thief

“This likely lad is one of a gang I caught in the act of nicking a bicycle in Crescent Street, Islington recently. Courtesy of our valued client Nokia, we’re all citizen journalists these days, and he was obliging enough to pose for the camera in appropriate ‘young offender’ pose. As you can see, he was terrified of the consequences of being caught in the act. (‘It’s a fair cop, guv, but society was to blame.’) … We’ve all heard about how cameras in mobile devices have changed the way that news is being reported and disseminated. This is my own little broadcast from the mean streets off the Cally Road.”

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