• @halcyoncmdr
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    English
    91 month ago

    It’s not necessarily about usefulness but rather quantity and economics of scale.

    The number of people needing wheelchairs in the first place is pretty small compared to the population, and adding the additional caveat of those that can still use their legs fully to power what is effectively a bicycle, results in a venn diagram with an extremely tiny use case.

    The cost of a decent basic wheelchair (not AliExpress/Walmart shit) is already high. Adding the complexity of a bicycle on top of that just makes it more expensive. And then there’s insurance which almost certainly would tell you to kick rocks before they would even think of covering a fraction of the cost because it isn’t necessary.

    • @Etterra
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      81 month ago

      This is literally why those silly “as seen on TV” product commercials makes sense. You know, the ones where ordinary looking people seem super, incompetently incapable of doing normal everyday tasks. The snuggie sure seems stupid… Until you realize it it’s meant for people who are disabled with mobility issues. Then it makes complete fucking sense. Most of those things were designed for disabled people, but that’s a really small market to appeal to, so they broadened their market in order to make the things affordable to the actual target demographic.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        41 month ago

        I met a guy while I was working at Amazon whos dad bought a couple snuggies for hunting and overnight drives, and apparently his elderly disabled grandma who just didnt watch tv claimed half of then. This was apparently in the mid to late 2000s. Also according to him his grandmother wasnt a ludite his grandpa ran a movie and videogames rental place, and had built a whole as mini threatre in their living room.

        Also according to him his grandma liked halo 2 and kicking his ass in smash melee.