Footomobiles

I was recently reading through newspapers from around 1898 to 1901. In a collection of articles from midwestern papers predicting what life would be like in the year 2000, I found this cartoon:


(Brown County Democrat, December 28, 1900.)

The label on the device reads ‘footomobile’. Words fail me.

Now, I have ridden a Segway (or, as I guess I have to start saying, ‘Footomobile’), and it’s actually tremendously fun. But of course they’re too expensive to be practical. Instead, I’ve found an alternative: electric skateboards.

They’re like Segways, but without all that silly safety stuff. I bought two cheap ones off eBay for about $40 each and tried them out. They were fun and worked well for getting around campus, so when I moved to Boston and got rid of my car, I bought a nice one from Exkate for $330 — the Raptor 3.0 model (I swear I didn’t pick it because of the name. They’re just everywhere!). It has a 10-mile range, travels pretty fast (10-15 mph), and recharges quickly. There are other longboard models with longer ranges and top speeds of 20 mph. Zero to twenty in four seconds. Yes.

The boards are heavy — mine is 28 lbs, and it’s the lightest they have. They still use lead-acid batteries because they can’t find cheap-enough lithium-ion packs. If they could switch to lithium-ion batteries, they could cut the battery weight in half and up the range to 60 miles. Sixty miles. Man. (Side note: if anyone has lithium-ion packs sitting around and wants a cool project, if you document it well, Exkate might be willing to send you some boards at cost to play with.) Their website isn’t the best, but if you have any questions, give them a call. The guys there have been really helpful, and they’ll give you any additional specs you’re looking for. You can also visit their shop in southern Orange County.

Now, the bad stuff: my board has suffered from various mechanical failures, and eventually I had to send it in for repairs. They said it’d take 2-3 days and it’s ended up being a month. I’m still waiting, in fact, but I think it’s finally on the way. Also, I’m a little disappointed the boards don’t hover like the ones in Back to the Future. But I’ve looked at some other companies and Exkate seemed like the best.

So, electric skateboards are magical. They’re practical for getting around cities or campuses, and they’re just plain fun to swoop around on. There’s nothing like carving up a hill. I hear Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics rides longboards and might be interested in getting one like mine, so maybe we can start a webcomic-author electric skateboard club. Practically everyone I know has a crush on Ryan, so it’d be interesting to see which was a more effective accessory for picking up girls — the skateboard or Ryan North.

154 Responses to “Footomobiles”

  1. Eli Mayfield Says:

    It’s good to see that both the bowler hat and the monocle will live well on, into the 21st century, and beyond.

  2. Grant Hutchins Says:

    I’m glad that they thought to put a cowcatcher in front.

  3. James Says:

    It’s fun to note that our driving skills are about as described also…

    just one of those things I suppose

  4. Eidolon Says:

    I’m just glad to see that brawling is still in style. And swearing. Check the guys in the background.

  5. Tillwe Says:

    @Grant: is that a cowcatcher? To me it looks like a coupling, so that — if you want to move with your footomobile, and not just stand around looking silly on a box — some kind of tractor (or horse-car) could be coupled onto the footomobile and set you in motion ;-)

  6. Funkmon Says:

    Yeah…I’ve got some Pocket PC batteries I could wire up to those bad lads.

  7. Martin Says:

    Skip lithium ion and replace the lead acid cells with lithium polymer cells. Over the last few years these have come into widespread use for electric-powered model aircraft, and hence become affordable.

    A 3-cell series pack runs between 9 and 12.6V, making a good drop-in replacement for a 12V lead acid cell and has significantly less weight. You just need a suitable charger.

    What is the capacity of your current battery and the peak current draw of the motor? Let me know and can suggest you a setup.

  8. adam Says:

    ZOMG, January has *31* days in the future!

  9. burt Says:

    yeah, crazy huh? like that’s ever gonna happen - wait a second…

  10. Ed Davies Says:

    We shouldn’t laugh too much at their “predictions” of transportation or clothing styles. They were, at least, numerate enough to discuss the twentieth century in the future tense on December 28th, 1900 - a distinction way beyond the comprehension of most alive on December 28th, 2000.

  11. adam Says:

    ZOMG, December has *28* days in the future!

  12. Slaps Says:

    I predict that in the year 3007, footmobiles will long be replaced by “legzoomers”.

    And they will totally float like the ones on B2TF.

  13. Greg Says:

    The first available year that the January shown could fall in would be 2002. January 2000 starts on a Sunday and ends on Monday, 2001 starts on Monday and ends on Wednesday. Which if you consider that the Seqway was first revealed at the end of 2001, makes the predictions of “footmobiles” in 2002 seem like a pretty good vision.

  14. Oh my god, everyone is Chinese! :) « Werther in China Says:

    [...] Would Jules Verne have written about a Segway? Might have. [...]

  15. Kyle Says:

    ZOMG, December has *28* days in the past!

  16. Craig Says:

    Let me know when you start reading newspapers from 1901 to 1904… there are some doozies there. Just curious, why were you reading ancient newspapers?

  17. scruff Says:

    Damnit! I want my hoverboard!

  18. xkcd Says:

    To those asking, the board I have uses two 12V cells in series, supplying a total of 13-16 amp-hours (note: the discharge curve is such that they lose voltage gradually, so a nicer battery would be an improvement even if it didn’t have more total capacity).

  19. Daniel Reeves Says:

    Do you stop by stepping on the tail? Is that tricky? Safe in traffic?

    I commute in Manhattan on (human-powered) skates and it’s great. Faster than either cabs or subway if there’s any traffic or walking on either end of the subway stops which there always is.
    And certainly kicks your skateboard’s ass. (Top speed ~50km/h (30mph) on flat, >60km/h (40mph) downhill. As for range, I’ve done 180 km (110 miles) in a day, but not without “recharging”.) Fast bikes kick my ass, but not nearly as light and portable.

  20. Tom Says:

    I think some are confused… or maybe just me. Aren’t they talking about the “new century” as 20th century, which is 1901 to 2000?

  21. Charlie Says:

    FYI, UBC Engineering Physics runs a couple of senior project courses and a team in the past developed their solution to the expensive segway: a servo controlled skateboard. Their sensor solution was more cost-effective too in comparison. Here’s a link to entrepreneur’s site (it’s further down the page and there are videos at the bottom too):

    http://www.ebikes.ca/projects/Emanual/

  22. Aditya Says:

    I’ve had the pleasure of test-driving an electric motorcycle. Looks the same as a regular cycle except for

    1) A large drum around the rear wheel
    2) What would normally be gear levers was actually a simple knob - forward for faster, back for slower.
    3) An LCD display on the crossbar showing your speed
    4) A battery pack just behind the seat.

    We took turns, and back then I weighed 94 kilos (207 lbs) and it still took me at 10 kmph (6 mph) up a gentle slope. (Now that I weigh 73 kg / 161 lbs I suspect it would do better :) ).

    Best bit was that like a hybrid car, the batteries recharged while braking. I don’t know what the range was, though, but we took six rounds around the block without re-charging.

    The electric skateboard looks cool, I’d want one!

  23. Pl Says:

    They weren’t too far off about the “no one will walk” part. In some rural areas (such as where I live,) you have to use a car or else you’ll get run over. Also, you’ll be too tired by the time you get to the store.

  24. Fons Says:

    Actualy somebody has made a promising breaktrough in Lithium-ion batteries. Chrysler will use that new version in their hybrid car which is due in 2010, so that could be a very nice future for the electrical skateboard!
    I shall look into the details of this.

  25. Rob B Says:

    What’s the learning curve on those things? Can an uncoordinated person pick one up and be confident to enough to use it in an hour or two? Does it get tiring standing up? Do you feel safe?

  26. maiko Says:

    um…

    …you’re kind of my hero.

  27. Sillybear25 Says:

    1. Design electric skateboard with Li+ batteries
    2. ???
    3. PROFIT!!!

  28. Adam Says:

    XKCD in a webcomic-mashup. I thought Chex was dead, but check out the Checkerboard Nightmare site as of 05 September, 2007 (http://www.checkerboardnightmare.com/index.html)! I can’t tell if Chris Straub is a fan of XKCD or not.

  29. Drakoboy Says:

    Well, that’s a funny prediction, but I, like Tom, think it’s for the 20th century, not the 21st, which actually makes it marginally funnier.

  30. Giselle Says:

    So, I dunno if anyone has brought this to your attention, but at PAX last weekend, Wil Wheaton was the Key Note speaker, and we around all weekend to sign autographs. Take note of his shirt on Saturday?

    http://flickr.com/photos/puja/1260405514/

    Thought that might make your day. :)

  31. Giselle Says:

    Wow I must be really tired because there are at least 3 mistakes in that last post. Sorry about that. PAX was not LAST weekend, and “we” should be “was.” >.

  32. bronwyn Says:

    i totally want an electric skateboard now, just so that all my friends can laugh at my totally uncoordinated ass when i fall off. a lot.

    until then, they’re simply going to have to do with watching me try to play games on the Wii. :D

  33. Mike MacHenry Says:

    I was the MIT Flea this past weekend. There were two kids showing off a homemade segway project. They said the parts cost them about $600 and it worked really well from what I saw. It was also a lot lighter than the commercial model.

  34. BlueNight Says:

    Random thought: I love the Segway in Scifi Channel’s new Flash Gordon series. The one ridden by Ming’s assistant with the long black coat.

  35. ninjavore Says:

    Um…

    You can get a for the same price that weighs less, goes faster, has better acceleration, and the bonus of not having everyone you know make fun of you behind your back for riding it.

  36. Jey Kottalam Says:

    Just build your own Segway-like device: http://tlb.org/scooter2.html

    Or if you feel adventurous, just build a Eunicycle: http://www.tlb.org/eunicycle.html

  37. Mary Says:

    Does a wheelchair or mobility scooter count? Can I be one of the cool kids now? Can I can I can I?

  38. adam Says:

    Unfortunately, no–if you read this blog then you are not one of the cool kids… except on December 29 which obviously doesn’t exist. ZOMG!

  39. toshiro Says:

    This would be fun to get as a kit. Sadly, the shipping across the pond costs almost as much as the board itself; I guess it’d be easier throwing one together myself (and possibly even cheaper, at that).

  40. andrea Says:

    hahaha they look like a cross between a radio flyer and a sit-n-spin. incidentally, has anyone else here ever used a wagon as a skateboard? because i sure have.

  41. andrea Says:

    also, the direction in which the man’s coat flaps are flying suggest that his footomobile is travelling in reverse — and yet he is cheerily facing forward. hmm.

  42. ChocloMan Says:

    In the twentieth century coat flaps are like that.

  43. Lem Says:

    Hmm… I think I want to know what the capacity of the battery is and the drain at various times. It’s a DC motor in there…

    I wonder how long a set of laptop batteries would last… they’ve got built in protection from overcharge as well, which is nice as Li Ion batteries can go pop…

  44. John Says:

    I’ve been skateboarding for about 10 years, but I’ve never actually seen one of these guys in action… and now I’m curious.

    I’m guessing the RC remote is used for acceleration and (hopefully) braking. Please correct me if I’m wrong!

    How do they act as a normal foot-powered board if the battery were to die on me? … I don’t think I’ll be able to ollie 28 pounds.

  45. Drew Says:

    I love the latest comic. I

  46. Montoya Says:

    Andrea: That’s because he’s slowing down. Duh.

  47. Nat Says:

    Did anyone notice the two dudes in a fight in the background?

  48. Sarah Francesca Says:

    I’m leaving a comment because I feel like a creep anonymously reading these details about your life.

  49. niteice Says:

    >also, the direction in which the man’s coat flaps are flying suggest that his
    >footomobile is travelling in reverse — and yet he is cheerily facing forward.
    >hmm.

    Well, he could certainly be stopping as well. Nobody said these footomobiles are easy. ;)

  50. Yasha Says:

    I also have a Raptor 3.0 that I used to commute to Google this summer. It’s back with me in Manhattan and I’ll have to see how it handles NYC… as soon as I get a new drive belt (mine busted in the middle of Mountain View, had to get a friend pick me up).

    The learning curve for an uncoordinated person like me was one day of scrapes and bruises, then within about a week of short trips I could go full speed no problem. Braking and acceleration is via handheld wireless remote. The brakes aren’t mechanical: it shorts the motor contacts. At low speeds you get very little braking, but careful braking from full speed: it will throw you off! And it accelerates VERY well - all beginners to this board (even regular skateboarders) seem to think, “Oh, I can handle it!” and squeeze the trigger back all the way and have the board fly out from underneath their feet.

    When I called Exkate they were very supportive and helpful, and even sent me a new drive belt for free even though it wasn’t under warranty since “it wasn’t supposed to break”. I highly recommend this board! If you’d like to talk to me about it, or want a chance to ride it, email me! flyashi at gmail.

  51. GW Says:

    # Nat Says:
    September 6th, 2007 at 11:34 pm

    Did anyone notice the two dudes in a fight in the background?

    I do in fact believe that is two footomobiles crashing! It does look like they are holding on to something…

  52. Teddy Says:

    As interesting as this is, we all know that a velociraptor can attain speeds of up to 60mph over flat, open ground. Why are these quacks content selling a mode of transportation incapable of even the most basic flight from an imminent and deadly peril!? AND WHY IS MY KEYBOARD NOT EQUIPPED WITH AN INTERROBANG?!

    TRH

  53. toshiro Says:

    About the braking (Re:Yasha): Isn’t shorting the leads a bit… archaic? The motors (from what I saw on their website) do not look like they are sporting heat dissipators, besides their own surface being black (yes, I know… visually black…). Longer braking could perhaps easily overheat the (already warm from propelling) motor.

    Or perhaps I’m just not trusting these guys enough.

    On a sidenote: To improve braking, people riding these …things… could wear capes like Batman… It would look pretty funny in my opinion.

  54. Tom St Denis Says:

    Like to point out that in January of 2000, the 1st was on a Saturday.

  55. Amanda Says:

    I work for Kamen for his robotics competition nonprofit, and this is totally going up in my office. Footomobiles, unite!

    Now if I only had a good derby hat to go with it.

  56. Yasha Says:

    Toshiro, braking isn’t too bad. You usually only need to brake for at most a few seconds - there’s no such thing as “extended” braking, the board is stopped by then. The motor does get a bit warm after extended riding, but usually not because of the braking but just from putting out 250W or whatever for 1/2 hr. It’s a little slower than biking, but a whole lot easier - when you get there, the only part that’s tired is your finger from holding down the throttle all the way for 1/2 an hour!

  57. Brian Says:

    In fact, January 1st, 1901 did fall on a Tuesday. The prediction is clearly for the 20th century, and “what life would be like in the year 2000″ is a prediction for the final year of the new 20th century.

    The question is: why aren’t the gentlemen e-mailing their New Year’s Greetings, rather than delivering them on their footomobiles?

  58. Mellomyman Says:

    In regards to the direction of man’s coat flaps, he is not necessarily travelling in reverse. He could be pulling hard to the left (as observed by his hand placement on the steering wheel). I’d imagine the left wheels going in reverse while the right wheels accelerate, making him spin in place. What I wonder is if these footmobiles can act as battlebots. Just throw a steel plate over the cowcatcher, and you got yourself a wedgebot. Throw in a pick axe and you got yourself a stew going.

  59. Sarah Says:

    If you ever meet someone, because they “accidentally” throw themselves in front of your skate board, scattering their books/groceries/precious bodily fluids everywhere, that’s me.

  60. Margaret Says:

    Hey hey. Those aren’t cowCATCHERS. They’re cowPUSHERS.

  61. Jonno Says:

    What I want to know is, if there is no walking in the future, why are there still stairs? Though, in my imagination, every footomobile has a retractable pogo-stick bottom for stairs, which is awesome.

  62. Sam Says:

    Oh my god yes, Jonno! I own a footomobile, complete with cowpusher/catcher, and the retractable pogo bottom. If only they remembered to make it thin enough to fit through the door.

  63. John Says:

    I like how the speed lines look like resistors.

    How well does the electric skateboard (or neo-footmobile) perform if you need to use it like a normal skateboard?

  64. Bob Koure Says:

    I’ve ridden both the Segway and Xootr’s electric version (which, sadly, isn’t made any more).
    I like the Xootr lots more. Lots less money (they were around $600. I think), lighter, less complicated - and were single-track vehicles (like bicycles and motorcycles and, well, push-scooters) which made them very easy to ride - camber-thrust “lean to turn” which we mostly all learned in grade school.
    Really light (20 lbs? something like that), and easy to fold up and carry into work or a store - and *very* useful to take on the subway.
    One Xootr downside was that the brakes were essentially nonexistent if the wheels got wet. I never owned a Segway, and the owner drew the line at letting me take it out in the rain to see how it would do.
    Another is simply that there’s no cargo space - so knapsacks or messenger bags.

  65. bryanstamour.com » Two days in: my thoughts Says:

    [...] in the mood to buy an electric skateboard, if I can find one, after reading the xkcd blog. It seems like an electric skateboard would be a really neat way of getting around campus, provided [...]

  66. Adam M Says:

    Hey, I spoke to the guy who owned the Exkate company for the last ~5 years or so… they actually sold a replacement lithium ion pack, but it didn’t really improve the weight or range that much… weight only dropped by ~25%. I’m not a battery expert, but I suspect that the needs of laptops and the needs of personal transportation devices in terms of current are pretty different, and lion batteries probably offer more benefit in the low-current scenario.

    Anyways, when they were selling the lithium ion pack, they neglected to change the charger plug, so (dumb) people would use the lead-acid charger on the lion battery, and the thing would catch fire. That, plus the negligible advantage and high price led them to drop the lion plans.

  67. Avish Says:

    Say, why don’t you pair up with Exkate for an electric skateboard with comic #139 on it? Then you could call it xk8cd.

    (I wrote a similar comment before but it doesn’t show up now, so either it got lost on a jammed interweb tube, or you moderated it out. If the latter’s true, I apologize for reposting.)

  68. Ben Says:

    The reason the calendar matches the year 1901 is because the picture was intended to be used as a calendar for the year starting shortly after this was published (which would, in fact, be the start of the Twentieth Century). The article, and picture, is still about life in the year 2000.

  69. Andreas Says:

    I read through that until halfway before I thought “Wasn’t there a comic about electric skateboards already?”

    Luckily you sneaked it in, sneaky bastard.

  70. arcadya!!! Says:

    dudes, theyre so not in a brawl. they have managed to run into eachother. the little @

  71. Yasha Okshtein Says:

    I’ve had to use the Exkate Raptor 3.0 as a regular skateboard twice: one time when I ran out of power, and one time when I busted the drive belt. Especially with the busted drive belt, it skateboards surprisingly well despite its 30lb weight. What helped when I ran out of power was to simply remove the battery pack and put it in a backpack. It skated much easier. However, I don’t know how to skatebaord, so ….

    (Yes, I don’t know how to skateboard but I ride an electric skatebord. You don’t have to push, just worry about steering, which makes it MUCH easier.)

  72. earcaraxe Says:

    I’m not completely convinced yet that this is really pointing towards the year 2000, considering it was published in 1900 it seems highly probable that “the new century” is the one that has just begun, not “the next century”. Considering the lack of fashion change and the trend that most of the “2000″ prediction drawings have a whole lot more tall metal buildings, I think it’s probably referring to sometime during the twentieth century, i.e. pre-2000

  73. DRF Says:

    In the New Century, women will by law not be allowed operate the Footomobile for modesty’s sake: Imagine the chaos that might ensue should an ankle be revealed as skirts are whipped higher than the instep by the awesome speed the Footomobile achieves!

  74. Rob Says:

    @Daniel Reeves:
    “I commute in Manhattan on (human-powered) skates … And certainly kicks your skateboard’s ass. (Top speed ~50km/h (30mph) on flat… ”

    Sorry, I gotta call you on that. Current world records for very short distance sprints on inline speed skates (on a track) work out to ~27 mph. There are a few inline skaters in the world who could outrun this skateboard, but not many, and not for long (short of exceeding its range).

    That said, I’m with human power. Motors are for the weak. :)

  75. Ed Davies Says:

    earcaraxe: ‘…considering it was published in 1900 it seems highly probable that “the new century” is the one that has just begun,…’

    As has already been mentioned here (Sept 5th at 6:23 am and 11:31 am, 7th at 8:31 am and 8th at 6:29 pm) “the new century” had not just begun in late 1900, it was about to begin. Obviously, footomobiles cause damage to numeracy related braincells.

  76. trr Says:

    In the past’s future everyone will look like the Monopoly man!

  77. Fer Says:

    OK, so I could imagine importing one of these electric Skateboards. But I’d have to know first, how does it handle down hills? The 4 miles to school is all down hill- and if I can’t keep it under control…

  78. Daniel Reeves Says:

    @Rob says:
    “Sorry, I gotta call you on that. Current world records for very short distance sprints on inline speed skates (on a track) work out to ~27 mph.”

    That’s average speed from a standing start.
    That said, fine, maybe I’d max out closer to 27mph.
    Still kicks Randall’s ass!

  79. Stogoe Says:

    Reeves, are you sure you’re not just an Internet Tough Guy?

  80. Joshua Wise Says:

    @Yasha:

    Was it just me sucking when I tried to ride the thing, or did it oscillate at high speeds for you, too? (Also, don’t your ankles get tired from balancing yourself?)

    When I brought Yasha’s anywhere above 1/3 throttle, it started oscillating back and forth — it felt like if I went any faster, it would oscillate badly enough to throw me off of the thing.

  81. Chainsaw Fencing Champ Says:

    I beat up 1000 Internet Tough Guys one afternoon. It wasn’t that hard. I don’t see what the big deal is.

  82. Jan Says:

    wait, so, you’ve been electro-skating around boston, the town i live in currently, and i didn’t know about it? well mr. xkcd…

    prepare to be ++***HASSLED***++

    -jan

  83. phoebe Says:

    Electric skateboards, pshaw! I want one of these.

  84. Orv Says:

    They failed to predict the enormous fat behinds Americans would get from not walking anywhere.

  85. adam Says:

    zOMG, phoebe, a sky-car! That’s so fucking awesome.

  86. Yasha Says:

    Josh: It takes a while to get used to. Ask a real skateboarder for advice. If you put your back foot all the way back then you get great control and good stability without oscillations, even at full speed. If you plant your feet right (for me, my toes would hang off the end) then balancing isn’t a problem either. In fact, I got so used to holding the throttle all the way down, my finger would hurt after 1/2 hr of riding (and wishing the damn thing would go faster, but understanding that if it could, it would be heavier as well).

    Fer: I had to go over a few overpasses and while uphill was much better (more controlled), downhill isn’t too bad - it’s just kinda scary. The braking works great, but if you brake too hard, hit a rock or bump in the road, then you may fall off. I learned to jump off when I feel it getting out of control. One thing to note: you may or may not make it 4 miles UPhill without recharging it at school. Fortunately the charger is small - a bit bigger than a laptop power supply.

  87. Wesley Says:

    http://www.slkelectronics.com/DeWalt/packs.htm nuff said

  88. Yasha Says:

    Sorry to post so much, but on the topic of batteries, A123 cells, while great, are prohibitively expensive. A more reasonable solution are V-28 packs, from Milwaukee Electric. To get the same Amp-hour that the Raptor 3.0 has now would cost about $600 but you’d get a little more voltage (28v vs 24v) and less weight, at the price of double the skateboard with SLA batteries, all to shave a few pounds.

  89. Pxtl Says:

    @Phoebe

    Do some digging. Moller has been using that Skycar to scam investors for decades. It is perpetually “a few years away” and will never be complete. Every time it looks like a deadline is approaching, he tears down half of it and starts from scratch, so that he never has to meet any requirements.

    Electric skateboards are here, available now. The Skycar is science-fiction.

    Besides, for “vapourware flying-car vehicles” I prefer the Pal-V.

    http://www.pal-v.com/

  90. Peter Hosey Says:

    Grant Hutchins:

    I’m glad that they thought to put a cowcatcher in front.

    What makes you so sure it’s a cowcatcher? Maybe they were the forerunners of modern ricers. ☺

  91. bronwyn Says:

    i think it’s so amazing that you learned Braille, xkcd! today’s comic is definitely ftw!

  92. Brandon Kleinwort Says:

    Over at Utopie, there’s a ‘chromolithographie’ of what the world of 1910 thinks the world of 2000 will be like. Apparently they predicted electric roller skates, as well as men crawling on the ground towards jaunty green hats.

    http://expositions.bnf.fr/utopie/grand/3_95a3.htm

  93. Kyzentun Says:

    I think it’s pretty clear that the guy on the ground crawling towards said hat has just experienced a predicted accident, and is cursing the people that predicted it, while retrieving his hat. Let us be glad that footomobiles did not become common, or 2/8 of us would be involved in an argument over a footomobile accident at any given moment. The electric skates therefore seem better, as only 1/6 of the people shown using them are recovering from an accident, and the accident is less serious, or the guy on the ground would also have profanity coming from his mouth.
    Electric skateboards are, of course, perfectly safe, since none of the persons depicted using them in http://xkcd.com/139/ are involved in accidents.

    (sorry if this posts multiple times, behind a very unstable connection)

  94. Caliban Darklock Says:

    I’m shocked people are asking “why?” about the old newspapers.

    Remember that reprinted 1902 Sears catalog in your school library? Read to tatters and always checked out and little groups huddled together in the halls and classrooms reading it?

    Why wouldn’t you expect that if someone saw a bunch of lat e19th century newspapers, he would immediately become fascinated and start reading them?

  95. John Rutherford Says:

    You have to love the “electrical” bolts shooting out of the thing, and the cow catcher. I love the Radio Shack catalog with the $500 1.3/megapixel camera and like a 64mb memory chip.

  96. Rob Says:

    @Daniel:

    “That’s average speed from a standing start.
    That said, fine, maybe I’d max out closer to 27mph.”

    Acceleration time might be significant in the shortest sprints, but it’s pretty trivial at longer distance. Check out the table here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inline_speed_skating
    and do some math. If you can hit 27mph on level ground, you are better than most people in the Olympics.

  97. McJoe Says:

    well, it shouldnt be too hard to retrofit your footomobile in the future. just get your hands on some lithium ion or nimh batteries when you get a chance and wire that stuff up.

  98. Rob Ashton Says:

    Heeh, I’ve bought one of these, and a lot of that is to do with Comic 139 and this ;-)

    I’ll let you know how I get on, both with skateboard and with women. (Although, my girlfriend might not be too pleased if I start cruising for the ladies on it)

  99. Daniel Reeves Says:

    @Rob:

    “Acceleration time might be significant in the shortest sprints, but it’s pretty trivial at longer distance. … If you can hit 27mph on level ground, you are better than most people in the Olympics.”

    No no no, either the distance is short and acceleration matters or the distance is long endurance matters. Those tables say nothing about what Olympic-level speedskaters (note inline is not an olympic sport) can hit as a max speed. It’s *easily* in the 30s.

    Put anyone comfortable on rollerblades in a pair of inline speedskates and they will beat Randall’s top speed of 20mph, not to mention the 10-mile range.

    Human-powered skates beat an electric skateboard, with current technology.

    That’s all I’m saying.

  100. Alexander Says:

    Excuse me, I didn’t get how do you control it?
    Does it have some kind of wireless remote or maybe you can start and stop it using your feet?
    By the way, have you ever had any accidents with this board?
    Thank you.

  101. Alexander Says:

    Whoops, I probably got it =) That gun-like stuff on a picture IS the remote controller…

  102. Palle Says:

    Martin Lithium Polymer battery’s are popular in RC vehicles because of their high discharge rates. Regular Lion cells are still cheaper then polymer battery’s, and the skateboard would not draw more current then they could handle.

    Unfortunately the Rapor 3 and 4 use regenerative breaking so it would be more complicated then simply dropping in some lithium battery’s because of their unique charging requirements

    I emailed Exkate for more details on the electrical specs but they havn’t responded :(

    http://www.batteryuniversity.com/ is an excelent site if you want to quickly brush up on your general battrey knowledge

  103. Scott Perry Says:

    hear hear, I’ve been using inline skates as my only shoes on campus since I started going to school in 2002. Best way to get around.

  104. Orv Says:

    I suspect on a small vehicle like this regenerative braking is probably not that much of an efficiency gain, unless you’re spending a lot of time going down steep hills. I recall seeing a figure somewhere that said it was usually only 30% efficient at best. Of course, if you don’t use it, then you need a resistor bank to dump the braking energy into heat, like locomotives use.

  105. Teshi Says:

    Are you accessing these old papers online or in a more archaic fashion? Because I would really love to read those articles.

  106. Dee Says:

    Judging by the two men behind/beside the building, magic exists in the 21st century.

  107. Shivathilak Says:

    lol..ur comics rock!(not much to say i know…but meh…..)

  108. SeaBlood Says:

    The best part of your comix is the little stick figure drwings of chicks. They are so appealing and sexy.

  109. mel Says:

    Okay, so interestingly enough, my friend and I were on the bike path in Davis Sq. and someone on one of these boards rode by. And the kid behind him was on a regular skateboard hanging on to a string tied to the first guy.

  110. mel Says:

    on second thought, the bike path is not necessarily IN davis, as much as it goes out toward somerville.

  111. Kablamo Says:

    Goose, she’s lost it, man.
    Aw, shit. I hate it when she does that.

  112. Consadine Says:

    Why were you poking through newspapers from the late 1800’s?

  113. Ariel Says:

    111 comments and not one mention of Y.T. or Snow Crash? Stephenson fans, you disappoint me.

  114. Jimbob Says:

    iirc, lithium ion batteries kind of suck for high-current draw applications — too much internal resistance. You may be able to go further, but probably won’t have as much acceleration, and your top speed won’t be as high. You could probably wire the cells up differently to combat this though.

    Don’t quote me on this though. I’ll wait for someone else to respond with the actual research. I love the Internets…

  115. beest Says:

    I just read 113 posts to make sure no one had posted this yet. I think it was worth it.

    http://www.engadget.com/2007/03/09/meet-the-one-wheel-balancing-scooter-suck-it-segway/

  116. Charly Says:

    Finalised version of the previous comment: http://www.engadget.com/2007/09/19/islide-the-skateboard-segway-hybrid/

    Skateboard meets segway, perfection.

  117. John Says:

    Not a comment on the skateboards - just letting you know Raptors *are* everywhere - including spreading to other webcomics…

    http://www.pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF231-Baby.jpg#214

    -Jb

  118. beest Says:

    Charly:

    That’s a different product designed by a different person. As far as I can tell it’s a student design project (http://www.hadassah.ac.il/Site/TechEn/Departments/Industrial/Gallery/finalProject/gallery07b.asp#) and not in production or even prototyped. I saw both posts and found the finished homebrew more interesting, as the guy designed it himself over several years and has a video of it actually working.

    It looks like a hell of a lot of fun to ride, if maybe a bit hard to turn.

  119. Blue Sky Mining » Back to the Future: Footomobiles, Electric Skateboards and Sustainable Mobility Says:

    [...] an interesting post from XKCD about predictions of the future coming true. The author, Randall Monroe, has recently been spending [...]

  120. Predicting the Future « bainite Says:

    [...] Predicting the Future Cartoons seem to be a pretty good way to predict the future… [...]

  121. Chris Says:

    Speaking of raptors, have you seen the latest Perry Bible Fellowship comic?

    http://www.pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF231-Baby.jpg#214

  122. Anton Says:

    I don’t know if anyone noticed, but the 20th century starts in 1901 and ends in 2000…. so basically, they were predicting how life would be in 4 days…

    Year 2001 to 2100 is the 21st century.

    Not sure if anyone mentionned that already, i haven’t read through the 120 posts, but i think it was good for everyone to know…

  123. Greg Says:

    I guess I’m kinda late to the party here, but if anyone is still interested in awesomely retro newspapers/magazines: http://blog.modernmechanix.com/

  124. Nathan Says:

    http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/09/20/feathered.raptor.ap/index.html

  125. Emily Says:

    I am too late!!

    I *was* going to post the CNN story, but alas, Nathan beat me to it.

    *sigh*

  126. Tanya Says:

    Next time you have mechanical issues, you should just give it to some MIT kids…they’re probably more reliable anyway ;-)

  127. Francisco Says:

    Sooo….

    http://www.xkcd.com/240/

  128. Grace Says:

    OMG I MISSED DREAMGIRL =(((( AND I’M LIKE RIGHT THERE

  129. Andrew Says:

    @Craig: possibly just because they’re awesome. I know I like to drop by my university library occasionally and flip through old publications just for the heck of it.

  130. Eli Says:

    So… was there a flash crowd at that playground in North Cambridge yesterday or what?…

  131. eitje Says:

    check the forum for more commentary, but:

    yes.

  132. Nestor Says:

    Find the story “the machine stops” by E.M Forster (Forrester?) it’s online somewhere, the guy pretty much nailed the internet, and it was written in the 1920s or earlier

  133. Sam Says:

    The internal resistance of Li-ion batteries is much higher than that of lead acid, this is why they are not as good with high current loads, especially the peaks that are created when you start a motor. There is a simple way around that in the form of supercapacitors. The internal resistance of supercapacitors is pretty much zero, so they can be used to buffer the current draw from the batteries when pulses of current are needed (such as when starting the motor). They are light, but they are expensive, making Li-ion an even more expensive option.

    Also, since the battery charging circuitry needs to be built into the cell for lithium ions, adding regenerative breaking wouldn’t be too big a deal.

    The cells alone for a 25v 15ah battery pack would be about $350 + at least $50 for the control/charging circuitry (if you could find one) + $100 for supercapacitors makes that one expensive skateboard. But the battery pack would weigh about 8lbs and have a flat discharge curve.

  134. Yasha Says:

    @Sam: If it really was that cheap, I’d go for it!

  135. ivy Says:

    The 23rd has come and gone. Did you really go to South Boston and find nothing?

  136. Sam Says:

    Cells

    These are the same batteries used in most laptops, there are better batteries for this but they would be much more expensive and nearly impossible to get.

    supercapacitors

    The calculations for what is actually needed in a battery pack were done very quickly, so I may be way off in terms of how many cells or caps would be needed.

    Really the problem is the charge/controller. Li-Ion batteries need to be recharged individually, and without a well designed charger they tend to burst into flames.

  137. Sam Says:

    sorry, I messed up the link for the cells

    Cells

  138. Nestor Says:

    Man I just noticed the alt text just as I was seriously considering trying this sleep cycle thing. It doesn’t sound so insane as the overman sleep cycle, since you do get solid 8-9 hour chunks of sleep. So I think I’ll give it a whirl. I already eat at and go to sleep random times so all this requires is changing the times I wake up at.

  139. Becky Says:

    I like the comic about women on the Internet. It reminded me of countless times I get on Ventrilo only to hear some guy say, “Whoa, it’s a girl! Girls play WoW??? Wanna get married?” Hehe.

  140. adam Says:

    From xkcd.com headline (Sept 29):

    “You can use http://forums3.xkcd.com/ to access the forums untill [sic!] DNS updates.”

    Just thought I’d let you know…

  141. Jeremy Says:

    Me needs that thing.

  142. grog Says:

    Powered by body motion. From the 1950’s.

    http://blog.modernmechanix.com/page/10/

  143. link Says:

    greatings…

    wonderful post…

  144. Jesus the Kid Says:

    The Raptor is fun to ride, but very problematic. Excate has pretty weak customer service (don’t bother trying to contact them by e-mail), and seem to be incredibly lazy about shipping.

    Hopefully the next models will be less troublesome.

  145. Alas, a blog » Blog Archive » Open Link & Comment Thread Says:

    [...] 105 years ago, they thought everyone would be able to afford Segways. The gender roles in the illustrations are not surprising, but I always find that sort of thing ironic in folks priding themselves on predicting the future (see also, Ray Bradbury’s Mars stories). Via XKCD. [...]

  146. Segyi Says:

    It is very good!
    Thanks

  147. 100 Facts About Anyone Says:

    hmm… I wonder how hard it would be to make one of those electric skateboards.

  148. Eric Says:

    Eric…

    Thanks for the info. By the way, I am a big fan of your site. Keep up the great work….

  149. Alex Says:

    I’m in the market for an electric skateboard; what was it about exkate that made you decide it was superior to eglide?

  150. xkcd » Blog Archive » New Electric Skateboard Says:

    [...] For anyone interested in buying a board, I recommend going to eBay and looking for a cheap used one to try the idea out. My first board, a vaguely toy-like e-skateboard ($31 on eBay in 2004) had an 80-watt motor (still surprisingly powerful — it managed to tow four people at one point). I bought a few other cheap used ones, and then, having decided these things were indeed awesome, I decided to spend some more money on a proper board for getting around the city. I got a 250-watt Exkate Raptor 3.0 for $320, which I talked about in an earlier post. [...]

  151. John Beck Says:

    I think, in case there’s any question left (I haven’t read all of the posts), that this calendar is definitely referring to the 20th century. The calendar in the cartoon matches that of January 1901, with the 1st being a Tuesday. Also though, were they predicting that the 20th century would be only one month long?

  152. munchie Says:

    rgr4t…

    classic scorched earth…

  153. Phil Says:

    Thanks, very interested story. Thats’s impressive! :)

  154. Captain Shite Says:

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