Segway scooter hot seller online
SEATTLE, Washington (Reuters) --The self-balancing Segway scooter that has
kept technophiles abuzz for the last two years ranks among the best-selling
items on Amazon.com's Web site, the online retailer said.
The machine will only be shipped beginning March 2003, but pre-orders
already place the high-tech scooter in the top half percent of sales, Steve
Frazier, vice president of electronics, tools and kitchen goods sales at
Amazon said.
Amazon started taking orders for the Segway last month, requiring a $495
deposit toward the human transporter's price of $4,950, and putting
enthusiasts one step closer to riding the much-hyped invention once known
only under its development name, "Ginger."
"It's selling better than many of our digital cameras," Frazier said. "If
this were ranked in our top items in electronics, it would be in the top
five when it first went on sale, and still be among the top 200 out of
about 68,000 total products."
Training session included
The brainchild of inventor Dean Kamen, the Segway carries one user standing
on a small platform between two side-by-side wheels. Leaning slightly
forward moves the scooter forward, leaning back reverses course and turns
are made by twisting the handle.
Segway buyers will get a limited edition print to gaze at until their
machine arrives, the device itself, a booklet and a training session on how
to master it.
Keys to the Segway won't be handed out until new users take the training
session, a safety precaution to ensure that they won't hurt themselves or
others. Three color-coded keys let users activate the machine in
"beginner," "intermediate" or "advanced" mode.
Popular with the urban, techie crowd
Frazier declined to provide actual pre-sale numbers, but said that, as
expected, sales were high among early technology buyers and people in urban
areas.
The U.S. Postal Service is testing the machines for mail delivery, and more
than 30 states have passed laws approving so-called personal mobility
devices like the human transporter.
But other states have yet to ease restrictions on urban usage, and in San
Francisco a debate is raging over whether the human transporter should be
allowed on that city's streets.
Copyright 2002 Reuters.
Find this article at:
<<http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/ptech/12/27/amazon.segway.reut/index.html>>
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- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scooter hot seller online Ronn! Blankenship
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scooter hot seller online Marvin Long, Jr.
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- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scooter hot seller onl... Julia Thompson
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scooter hot seller... Erik Reuter
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scooter hot s... Marvin Long, Jr.
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scooter h... Erik Reuter
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scoot... Ronn! Blankenship
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scoot... Marvin Long, Jr.
- Re: SCOUTED: Segway scoot... Doug Pensinger
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