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I think we animals find too much to complain about. They need more time and that is understandable. This is an amazing gift for Chicago and if the biking community is not going to be supportive from the get-go then no one else will. So far the Mayor has been as bike friendly as the last one. Changes take time. So far 1,000 people have signed up, which means that even if they all paid the $125 founder fee, that is only $125,000 trickling in for something that clearly must have cost millions. Imagine on a stormy day like today when I will probably chicken out of biking to work as I have to meet a friend for dinner after work - I could have hopped on the bus there, and rode the Divvy to the dinner date if I suddenly found I had a short rain-free window later after work. This is going to be COOL!
Actually, not complaining about it being late, just disappointed. It is better to have it be right when it is launched. I am pretty sure this segment of the cycling community was a big part of the early adopters who signed up already. We are very much looking forward to Divvy!
+1
Lisa Curcio 6.5 mi said:
Actually, not complaining about it being late, just disappointed. It is better to have it be right when it is launched. I am pretty sure this segment of the cycling community was a big part of the early adopters who signed up already. We are very much looking forward to Divvy!
As a software developer, I am always in favor of more QA time. It's better to hammer out the bugs before going to production.
Sure, but one of the reasons the City cites for outsourcing and privatizing this stuff is to control risk isn't it? And here is more evidence that sending Chicago dollars out of state to Portland (Alta) and out of the country to China (bikes) wasn't necessarily the best approach.
As a SI consultant in a previous life, I'd say it is better to have more functional design time. Bugs usually aren't a sign of bad coding, but instead a sign of a mismatch between what the user actually wants and what they documented in the functional spec.
Adam Herstein (5.5 mi) said:
As a software developer, I am always in favor of more QA time. It's better to hammer out the bugs before going to production.
+1
SlowCoachOnTheRoad said:
I think we animals find too much to complain about. They need more time and that is understandable. This is an amazing gift for Chicago and if the biking community is not going to be supportive from the get-go then no one else will. So far the Mayor has been as bike friendly as the last one. Changes take time. So far 1,000 people have signed up, which means that even if they all paid the $125 founder fee, that is only $125,000 trickling in for something that clearly must have cost millions. Imagine on a stormy day like today when I will probably chicken out of biking to work as I have to meet a friend for dinner after work - I could have hopped on the bus there, and rode the Divvy to the dinner date if I suddenly found I had a short rain-free window later after work. This is going to be COOL!
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