Folding Money   

bicycle folded up You might recall me mentioning that bike I commute with. The one I folded up in 10 seconds and popped into a suitcase and brought on the plane with me to Aspen, and that I think is so wonderful? The Brompton? Well, there was a nice article in the Observer about its inventor, Andrew Ritchie, this Sunday. It’s a very well known type of story: The obsessive and eccentric British inventor, unable to sell his wonderful design and idea. Gets his friends and family to fund his tinkerings with the prototype in the bedroom….We’ve all been there!

bicycle opened upExcept that, for a change, it paid off. Several people fall in love with the thing and buy it. It works wonderfully and makes sense. Reading what he says in the interview (coupled with the fact that the interview is in the newspaper’s business section) it seems that he’s looking to sell the company. So much for the “mom and pop” TLC treatment of every customer….

What’s the betting it won’t be a British company shortly? Sigh.

-cvj


10 Comments on “Folding Money”   rss feed

  1. Aaron Bergman

    On a somewhat physicy note, I found this in the NYT (BugMeNot is your friend) about people trying to sell the old physics department trick (and other departments, apparently) of making ice cream out of liquid nitrogen.

    (On another note, links in the insta-preview thing don’t seem to work.)

  2. Clifford

    Oh, never be shy to find a physics link in the dross that I post up on this site!

    Yes, they used to make ice-cream that way in Santa Barbara when I was there. Despite my physics training, I’ve always been a bit suspicious of the liquid nitrogen assisted ice-cream. Always been a bit concerned about what’s left over after the stuff has boiled off leaving the tasty ice-cream.

    Might be the same problem that stops me from believing that a Boeing 747 will take off when I’m watching it taxiing along the runway immediately prior to take off - never looks like it’s going fast enough!

    -cvj

  3. Gordon Chalmers

    Here’s a question:

    When do you think the powers that be will come up with ‘warp drive’?

  4. Clifford

    Oh…. Somewhere between extraordinarily unlikely soon, and never. (But maybe there’s a British inventor going around trying to get a company to build his/her design for something similar!) Now please Gordon, don’t start posting a long series of equations telling us about your warp drive theories. If you’ve got such an idea, write a paper and publish it through the normal channels. :-) Cheers,

    -cvj

  5. Gordon Chalmers

    Ok.

    But I figured out how to count integer solutions to polynomials today, and it is very explicit, via the contour integral.

  6. Clifford

    That’s great Gordon. I didn’t intend to seem mean, but do try to keep contributions to a thread of discussion at least vaguely on-topic, or one endangers the coherence of the discussion. Thanks for understanding.

    Best,

    -cvj

  7. Pingback from The Walk Up Mount Wilson | Cosmic Variance

    [...] So I unpacked a little, did some shopping at the local Trader Joe’s (giving me an excuse to test the bike to see that it had made the return journey well - it had), gave my usual explanations about how the bike worked to a few random inquisitive locals, and came back home and went to bed. The next morning saw me rise at 5:30am and get my gear (sandwich, water, nuts, fruit -the last of the Aspen peaches- , directions, boots, more water, etc) ready to get significantly high up the mountain before the sun got too hot. As it happened, I was later leaving than I intended, but I drove over to the trailhead and bent my back into the task by 7:50am. The sun was already beginning to beat down, actually, but was not yet unpleasant. It was a wonderful hike, and I was thinking about great works of physics for most of the way, and in that frame of mind found it inspiring to be going up the Old Mount Wilson trail where lots of great physicists had tread before. [...]

  8. Pingback from Perhaps It Has Begun! | Cosmic Variance

    [...] Yesterday, while on foot to a lunch meeting on campus, guess what I saw…. Another Brompton! You’ve no idea how exciting that is. (If you don’t know what I’m talking about, and you most likely don’t, see my earlier posts here, and here.) Sure, it’s nice to be maybe the only bike of its sort in the city, and while tiring to have to explain what it is all the time, sure, it’s nice to get the rounds of applause and requests for autographs every time I fold or unfold it in public, but I really prefer the thought that people are waking up to the idea that this is the way to go. Cycling more, and using public transport in combination with that. As I’ve said before on this blog, LA is an ideal city for cycling (mostly flat, perfect weather most of the time) and the best way to take advantage of the bus, rail and subway system (sigh…yes, they exist, but there are gaps) is to connect them up with a bike. And a folding bike is ideal. A beautifully engineered, comfortable, and compact, really fast folding one is even more ideal. [...]

  9. Pingback from It Just Keeps Getting Better | Cosmic Variance

    [...] It’s one of those excellent “bendy buses” (as I like to call them), and it is a completely new design that is rather large and spacious. This is the first Metro Rapid route they have put them on (they first started using them on the special Orange line in the valley), and they’re excellent. It’s much more like riding the subway than a bus, as the ride is very smooth. Also, there’s even more room under the seats for things like my Brompton. (In the picture of the interior, the reason there’s nobody on the bus is becaue I took at 6:15am today, and it is at the start of the route. Within 15 minutes it was being used by several people.) [...]

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