JUMP was acquired by Uber for ~$200M, which wasn't too surprising with previously rumors swirling and the JUMP + Uber partnership that was announced last month. Here's a good video from @titoyooo:
Those in SF and Washington DC have seen these bright red bikes littered around the city (along with several other bike and scooter rentals), which for residence is causing frustration. I saw a photo of a Bird in a garbage can the other day. 😝
Personally, I'd prefer to fly around SF.
Biiiig fan of JUMP. Been riding it almost every day since I joined (SF). The app is intuitive and helpful.
The basket is awesome - I can take my sweater and backpack off and put them in the basket and don't end up with a sweaty back when I get to where I am going.
This morning I used a BIRD scooter because there wasn't a JUMP bike close enough. For now that is a-ok, but I much prefer JUMP because it wakes me up a bit and I enjoy biking.
Kind of confusing: the price is $2 per 30 mins but then tax is added on top of that so if you look at payments it will say $2.17 or $4.34 or something.
Pros:
- Exactly the amount of energy I want to spend commuting
- Price is fair
- Can reserve a bike and do not risk getting there and not getting
Cons:
- Typically a ~10 min walk to a bike if you live on a hill
- Anti-hub model is great, but it doesn't 'guarantee' there will be a bike close
Every time I've seen a story about rent-a-bikes, the biggest problem seems to be that they all stack up in one area - people ride to work, and take the train home. I remember seeing trucks constantly driving trailer loads of bikes around in Brisbane when they tried it there.
Is that something that's a problem in other markets?
@rossdcurrie@duarteosrm Seems the companies should pay people to ride them back. Maybe there would be a way for the homeless to earn money for doing a bit of bike riding in the late evenings.
How does the ride on these Jump bikes compare to LimeBike?
I tried an electrified LimeBike this afternoon for the first time and it was as fun as eating a wet sandwich. In fact, the ride was so unenjoyable that instead of going for a jaunt on the Bay Trail I rode straight home.
I've seen how "manual" bikes are being abused here. How exactly does JUMP, which I assume electric bikes will cost much more to produce and maintain, prevents/mitigate such an issue?
Shame this wasn't around in Lisbon before they started installing the public e-bike docks. Would be perfect for such a hilly city. On the other hand, one entire year on the current public system here is the same price as 7.5 hours of Jump.
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Biiiig fan of JUMP. Been riding it almost every day since I joined (SF). The app is intuitive and helpful.
The basket is awesome - I can take my sweater and backpack off and put them in the basket and don't end up with a sweaty back when I get to where I am going.
This morning I used a BIRD scooter because there wasn't a JUMP bike close enough. For now that is a-ok, but I much prefer JUMP because it wakes me up a bit and I enjoy biking.
Kind of confusing: the price is $2 per 30 mins but then tax is added on top of that so if you look at payments it will say $2.17 or $4.34 or something.
Pros:- Exactly the amount of energy I want to spend commuting
- Price is fair
- Can reserve a bike and do not risk getting there and not getting
Cons:- Typically a ~10 min walk to a bike if you live on a hill
- Anti-hub model is great, but it doesn't 'guarantee' there will be a bike close
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