sniper said:why/how the **** does he fall there anyway?
DominicDecoco said:The Clinic never disappoints.. Seriously, where do you find these people..?
The problem with that analysis is that the bike doesn't "completely 100% stop." It remains in motion, to some degree, the entire time. As much as I am enjoying this thread, the bike never really stops.Bontie said:From the comments:
"This is what I see...his bike is completely 100% stopped...no movement....somehow his bike begins moving in a semi-circle and accelerates in that motion until it is run over by the camera bike!!!!!"
DominicDecoco said:The Clinic never disappoints.. Seriously, where do you find these people..?
benzwire said:Also notice that the crankarm is not touching the ground and is not moving.
sniper said:why/how the **** does he fall there anyway?
Granville57 said:Perhaps Garmin is in cahoots with the Google Self-Driving Car technology?
[Sebastian Thrun] joined Google in 2007, where he led the program to develop its self-driving car, and then founded Google X, the ultra-secretive research lab behind Google Glass and other research projects so far-out that Google calls them "moon shots."![]()
He tosses a pair of bike cleats and a Lycra cycling kit onto the ground, kicks off his sneakers...
Thrun, who is 46 years old and originally from Germany, is a committed athlete...and is an avid road cyclist.
Thrun clipped into his custom-made road bike and scooted up Arastradero Road, leaving me panting a few lengths behind. "Sebastian is like the smartest guy you've ever met, but on speed," says the entrepreneur Steve Blank, a friend of Thrun's and a Udacity investor. "And he hates to lose."
veganrob said:That bike looks like it has a mind of its own and Ryder is afraid to stop it. Good thing the moto ran it over.
sniper said:you do wonder why he falls in the first place.