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Breadtube if it didn't suck.
Post videos you genuinely enjoy and want to share, duh. Celebrate the diversity of interests shared by chapochatters by posting a deep dive into Venetian kelp farming, I dunno. Also media criticism, bite-sized versions of left-wing theory, all the stuff you expected. But I am curious about that kelp farming thing now that you mentioned it.
Low effort / spam videos might be removed, especially weeb content.
There is a cytube that you can paste videos into and watch with whoever happens to be around. It's open submission unless there's something important to commandeer it with at the time.
A weekly watch party happens every Saturday (Sunday down under), with video nominations Saturday-Monday, voting Monday-Thursday. See the pin for whatever stage it's currently in.
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That's a Class 3 bike, but you'd do well to buy a Class 2 bike that has a Class 3 unlock mode. My Aventon Abound LR is Class 2 limited to 32kmh which my city regulates as the max rating for any bike infrastructure. It unlocks a 40kmh mode from the display if I want to ride faster on roads. Most non-cargo ebikes with that feature will go the full 45kmh, with the utility tradeoff not being worth it for me. Unpaved infrastructure like trails are limited to Class 1 where the motor reaches 32kmh but you can't use a throttle. If you buy a bike that goes faster than 45kmh, increasingly cities are outlawing those and regulating them as motorcycles.
https://www.aventon.com/products/level-3-step-through-commuter-ebike?variant=44177465082051 Something around the specs of this would be a good budget commuter bike, with the comfortable carrying capacity of 2-4 bags of groceries, that reaches full Class 3 speed. Velotric and Specialized have some good models that you can pick up, especially used/overstock, for $1300-2000 and have quality components from. My commuter bike is a Class 2/3 Bianchi Omnia that I got from Upway.co with $3500 components for $1600. The electronics on that will probably last me 5-10 years of heavy use.
Where I am in Canada, the speed limit for ebikes is 32 km/h, which does feel too slow at times especially when riding on the road with cars. I understand the slower speed limit for bike paths that might be shared with pedestrians too. I've heard I can take my Specialized bike to the US and have them program it to the US speed limit (I believe 38 km/h) but that also comes with risks.
I've come to terms with 32kmh as the compromise speed, albeit I try to avoid traffic at all costs and can for 90% of my commute. Even when I've unlocked my commuter bike to 45kmh, it doesn't really get me there faster because I end up being more cautious and slowing down whenever I think I might have to brake at max speed. I still feel slow next to the cars on half our urban roads, but I feel too fast to safely correct/stop/ditch the bike. At 32kmh my reflexes are a lot better and the injury risk of the crash is halved. I can keep the speed consistent while still having enough time to safely stop in 2m. Slow is smooth and smooth is fast in my case.
Any of those that don't have built in GPS tracking?
I think most pre-2023 models don't include it outside of super premium models, but now that's becoming pretty standard in anti-theft suites because they're priority targets. For me the privacy concerns are a worthwhile tradeoff for the other modern features. My 2025 Abound auto-locks the kickstand and rear wheel, is password protected, has a motion alarm that notifies me on my phone, and I can geofence it or lock the motor remotely. Those features are really uncommon in older bikes. At the same time you're also getting an older and smaller battery that you can't replace as easily, maybe a cadence sensor that feels a lot worse than a torque sensor, and limited app support for things like real-time monitoring of the electronics.
On my 2023 Bianchi's Bosch app, I can disable the GPS tracking by disabling location permissions on my phone. Presumably other bikes with Bosch systems have that same software option, but my Aventon's GPS tracker is built into the bike's motherboard.