Everything You Need To Know About The Hoverboard Craze
Hours after police slammed him to the ground for trying to ride a “hoverboard” through security at Los Angeles International Airport, the rapper Wiz Khalifa took to Twitter to share some nuanced thoughts about his transportation gizmo of choice.
“All because I didn’t want to ditch the technogy everyone will be using in the next 6 months,” he said, of the confrontation. “I stand for our generation and our generation is gonna be riding hover boards so if you don’t like it eat a dick!”
Well, that’s certainly one way to put it.
Though Khalifa’s proclamation likely killed his chances for a hoverboard industry spokesperson role, his scuffle with law enforcement may have turned him into the poster boy for the new motion movement sweeping the nation. Though not yet mainstream, so-called hoverboards, and other motorized walking-replacement devices, are growing in popularity, showing up everywhere from city sidewalks, to NBA locker-rooms, to YouTube and Vine videos shot by social media stars.
Unlike the Segways that may have paved the way for them, hoverboards are actually cool. They’re being used by the right people, and seem to have little stigma attached. So prepare for them to stick around.
Here’s a quick crash course on the devices driving this developing phenomenon
Exhibit 1: The Hoverboard (less cool name: hands-free Segway)
A nonscientific study of motorized device popularity puts the two-wheeled hoverboard, aka the hands-free Segway, at the top of the pile. The device is the type Khalifa rode through the airport at the time of his kerfuffle. It was also put on display during the NBA finals by the Cleveland Cavaliers J.R. Smith, who rode it through the bowels of Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena before and after games.
These hoverboards are pretty simple to use: You lean forward to go forward, lean backward to go in reverse, place a bit more pressure with your right foot to turn right, and place a bit more pressure with your left foot to turn left. (I tried one last week and almost flew through a window in a New York City office building — but I feel like I could get the hang of it within a week.)
The biggest name in the hoverboard category is the IO Hawk, which sells for about $1,200 on Amazon and has a max speed of 6.2 miles per hour, according to Amazon. There are cheaper models on the market though. In about five minutes of cursory Amazon research, I found one listed at $316.
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