bikesharing

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  • Bird Bike

    Bird reveals its own e-bike as it moves into bikesharing

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    06.23.2021

    Bird Bikes will arrive in several North American and European cities this year.

  • Interim Archives via Getty Images

    Google Maps now displays bike-sharing locations in 24 cities

    by 
    Georgina Torbet
    Georgina Torbet
    07.16.2019

    Bike-sharing is a convenient way to get around a city, but with so many schemes operating concurrently it's sometimes tough to know where the nearest station with available bikes is. Now, Google can tell you.

  • Uber

    Uber's Jump will take on Lime's e-bikes in London

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    05.24.2019

    Londoners have seen multiple bikeshare companies come and go -- including ofo, oBike and Urbo. When Lime introduced its e-bikes in December, it seemed like the tide could be changing. Now, Uber's Jump will give it a go. As part of a pilot program, Uber dropped 350 of its bright red, dockless electric-assisted bikes in Islington today.

  • Jeff Greenberg via Getty Images

    Lyft offers free bikeshare trips on Earth Day

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    04.19.2019

    While you might still think of Lyft primarily as a ridesharing company, it also has the largest bike-sharing network in the country -- thanks to its Motivate acquisition last summer. To celebrate Earth Day and promote its carbon-free transport, the company is offering free bikeshare rides on Monday, April 22. You'll be able to hop on a free bike in New York City, Washington, DC, Chicago, Minneapolis, Columbus, OH and Portland, OR. But each city will handle the promotion slightly differently, so check in with your local network before you plan to ride.

  • Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    Uber's bike service is cutting into car rides

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.08.2019

    If you suspected that Uber's Jump bike sharing would be popular enough to cut into its mainstream car service, you suspected correctly. Jump has revealed that more than 63,000 customers in San Francisco have taken over 625,000 trips since a launch in the city in 2018, and that this popularity is affecting car rides in the area. While an initial study in July showed that bikes were starting to replace cars, Jump noted that the trend had "remained consistent" since then -- the more people relied on pedal power, the larger the decrease in car trips. That was particularly true for peak periods.

  • Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

    Uber is hiring robotics teams to work on bikes and scooters

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    01.20.2019

    Uber is only gradually resuming its self-driving car program, but it's already thinking about expanding that technology to its two-wheeled services. The Telegraph has discovered that Uber is hiring for a "micromobility robotics" team that would bring "sensing and robotics technologies" to shared bikes and scooters. While the exact plans aren't clear, the newspaper believed this would lead to rides that park themselves -- important when carelessly parked scooters are a plague in some cities.

  • AP Photo/Kathy Willens

    Lyft will 'more than triple' Citi Bike's size in $100 million deal

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    11.29.2018

    Lyft has just completed its acquisition of the company behind Citi Bike, and it's not wasting any time ensuring it's a force to be reckoned with in the bike sharing world. The company has struck a deal with New York City to expand Citi Bike through a $100 million investment. The plan will "more than triple" Motivate's required 12,000 bikes (it's not currently meeting that goal) to 40,000 within the next five years, and more than double the coverage area to 35 square miles. This will include a mix of conventional and pedal-assist e-bikes, and should include 12 new valet stations.

  • Lime will reportedly test car-sharing service in Seattle

    by 
    Sam Desatoff
    Sam Desatoff
    10.31.2018

    Bike- and scooter-sharing startup Lime is looking to test car rentals in Seattle, according to a report from The Information. Lime, which launched in early last year and operates in markets across 26 US states, has boasted that its scooters have taken cars off the road in cities where it operates. Now, it's reaching for a piece of the growing car-sharing market with a small host of around 500 cars made by Fiat Chrysler. There's no concrete date set for when Lime will begin offering the new service, but an application submitted to Seattle's car-sharing program in October indicates it could happen very soon.

  • Justin Sullivan via Getty Images

    Lime offers free bike and scooter rentals on Election Day

    by 
    AJ Dellinger
    AJ Dellinger
    10.26.2018

    If you're looking for a way to the polls this Election Day, you can snag a free ride via bike or scooter from Lime. The company is offering free trips on its fleet of shared bicycles, e-bikes, and occasionally abused electric scooters on Tuesday, November 6th.

  • Zoov launches an ebike sharing system that fits in with existing roads

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    10.18.2018

    Whether they take the form of scooters or bikes, pedestrian mobility programs have sprung up quickly around the globe, occasionally angering people and governments in cities that hadn't asked for a rack of vehicles in the middle of their sidewalk. New French startup Zoov claims its approach to bike sharing "respects public roads" with smaller stations that can fit 20 bikes in the area of a single parking space and comfortable bikes that don't need an external lock.

  • Uber

    Uber app tweak shows how you'll swap between calling a car and a scooter

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    09.06.2018

    Uber has stated its intentions to include scooters alongside in its retinue of transportation options, and last week, news emerged that they're planning on building their own models alongside bike and car rentals. How the company plans to integrate all those offerings has been unclear, and will likely be difficult. But today, Uber revealed how users of its app will toggle between all their offerings with a feature called Mode Switch.

  • Eduardo Munoz / Reuters

    Uber may try to buy Citi Bike parent company Motivate

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    06.08.2018

    Lyft might have thought its plan to buy bike-sharing company Motivate was a done deal. Uber, it seems, has other plans. Reports last week suggested that Lyft had struck a deal for upwards of $250 million to buy Motivate. But Uber is considering muscling in with its own offer, Axios reports.

  • Jump

    Uber's electric bike-sharing service is launching in Europe

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    06.06.2018

    In a continued push to expand beyond traditional taxi rides, Uber has announced plans to roll out its Jump bike rental service to cities in Europe. The company acquired bike-sharing platform Jump just a few months ago and was quick to offer the service in Washington DC and cities throughout California. Now it aims to launch in Berlin before the end of the summer, with other European cities to follow.

  • Ramin Talaie/Corbis via Getty Images

    Lyft is reportedly close to buying the company behind Citi Bike

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.01.2018

    Lyft might not sit idle while Uber leaps into the bike sharing space. The Information sources have claimed that Lyft is close to acquiring Motivate, the bike sharing behemoth responsible for New York City's Citi Bikes and San Francisco's Ford GoBikes. Neither company has agreed to comment on the move or how it would affect service, but it supposedly wouldn't affect Motivate's existing agreements.

  • Uber

    Uber buys San Francisco bike-sharing service Jump

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    04.09.2018

    Uber is getting serious about its bike-sharing aspirations. The company just announced its purchase of Jump, the bike-sharing platform featuring "electric, dock-less" bikes. Previously, Jump bikes were available in the Uber app as part of a pilot program. Rather than going to a specific rack in the city, bikes from Jump can be dropped off and locked up wherever it's legal to park a bike. Details are scant at the moment, but it looks like you can order a bike as easy as you'd order a black car or Prius. You can also continue to use the Jump app if you'd rather.

  • Apple

    Apple Maps now includes bike-sharing locations in 179 cities

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    03.12.2018

    Apple and Ito World have partnered to bring bike-sharing dock information to Apple Maps, TechCrunch reports. Now, in a number of cities, users can just type "bike sharing" or the name of a bike-sharing service into the Apple Maps search bar and it will show you all of the nearby docks as well as the bike-sharing service's website and phone number. Ito World's bike share data feed currently includes information for 179 cities in 36 countries.

  • Isaac Brekken/Getty Images for Lyft

    Lyft's Baltimore deal turns bike sharing stops into pickup points

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.15.2018

    Uber isn't the only ridesharing outfit with an interest in bike sharing. Lyft has formed a partnership with Baltimore Bike Share that will launch hybrid pickup points and bike sharing hubs across the Maryland city. The aim, of course, is to help you switch transportation methods with a minimum of fuss. You could take just one Lyft trip downtown and pedal around for the rest of the day, or bike to a stop if you only occasionally need more than human-powered transport.

  • Uber

    Uber’s latest venture is a bike-sharing service in San Francisco

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    01.31.2018

    Uber's piloting a new service in San Francisco alongside dockless bike-sharing startup Jump. Uber Bike will let users rent one of Jump's 250 bikes, charging $2 for the first 30 minutes and an additional per-minute fee thereafter. Jump was granted a permit by the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency earlier this month, which made it the first company to operate a dockless bike-sharing program in the city. Jump's 250 bikes should launch around the city between now and March and the SFMTA may allow the company to release 250 more after nine months, depending on how things go. The permit was issued for 18 months, during which the SFMTA will evaluate the program and the public's response.

  • CDIC / Reuters

    China's largest ride-hailing company is investing in bicycles

    by 
    Sean Buckley
    Sean Buckley
    09.26.2016

    The largest ride-hailing service in China just made a big investment in a different kind of transportation program: bicycle sharing. According to a report from TechCrunch, DiDi Chuxing is kicking off a "multi-layered partnership" with Ofo -- an app-based bicycle sharing outfit with a network of over 70,000 bikes in 20 cities. The details of the investment are pretty bare, but DiDi Chuxing says the companies will "explore strategic cooperation in urban rideshare, including offering a quality bike-sharing experience on DiDi's platform." In other words, the company's ride-hailing app may include a bicycle rental option in the near future.

  • BitLock offers a bring-your-own-bicycle approach to bike sharing

    by 
    Brian Heater
    Brian Heater
    10.15.2013

    Unless you're an enraged motorist, there's plenty of good to be found in the current push for big city bike sharing programs. BitLock is certainly in keeping with the spirit of such initiatives, albeit on a much more localized scale. The proposed product is essentially a standard bike U-lock that communicates with Android and iOS devices -- get within proximity and click the unlock button on an approved handset and the BitLock opens up for you. The device is, thankfully, weather-resistant and has a battery that should last up to five years, according to claims (and you'll get a notification on your phone when it's finally ready to shuffle off this mortal coil). What's more interesting here, however, is that the device is being couched as a form of low-entry bike sharing, as you can have multiple users sign up for a single lock. The app will note where the bike is left on a map, so you or a pal with access can locate it later -- and GPS also gives the app some health-tracking capabilities, which are all the rage. The locks, not surprisingly, won't be cheap -- the base Kickstarter pledge to get your hands on one is $89, and the proposed retail price is $140. That's $55 more than an annual Citi Bike membership, for you New Yorkers keeping track.