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That's exactly the use case we're going after. Docks work if you happen to near them, and most people aren't within a convenient distance from them. We aim to place everyone within minutes of one of our bikes at any point in time, so you wouldn't have to think about commuting between docks.


This is awesome. :)


Yup, over the past few years, station-based bikeshares like Citibike have done a great job at showing the bikes as a public resource can work, and help develop biking into a legitimate commute option.


We've a few tricks up our sleeves here to make it effective and affordable for us.


Dynamic pricing to incentivize trips that bring bikes back to high-demand origin points?


Thanks for your support! Which city are you in? (And do sign up at https://spin.pm)


Hey stevenrace, I'm Derrick, one of the co-founders of Spin. Given our roots in the US, we're building our bikes for the local market, and use different tech than the Chinese companies, for example, FCC-compliant devices or networks that are available in the US (3G and newer).


This is a completely empty statement.

Since you are one of the co-founders you should be able to spend at least some effort on answering the actual question or explain why you would chose not to do so.


Thanks for the support! Making biking more accessible for everyone is one of our goals with Spin. Where are you based, and what's your local program?

PS. This is Derrick, one of the co-founders of Spin :D


Portland Oregon's "Niketown" program


Sorry you experienced that! We just discovered a bug that didn't persist the offer to the end in a minority of cases, and it's now been fixed. And thanks for your feedback about our prices. Our price at launch is actually derived from other services in the reservations space (ie Table8, TableSaavy), but we're always evaluating our price point.


Cool! Thanks for reaching out via email, I appreciate the effort.

I'll definitely give this a shot at the discounted price. I really do like the idea, I just don't think I'd be willing to pay the (current) full cost. Who knows though, maybe I'll sing a different tune after a few reservations.


Hey everyone, this is Derrick, the creator of The Loft Club.

We noticed a common pattern when we eat out. A cursory Yelp search, perhaps a cross reference dining guides, and finally making the reservation (via OpenTable/SeatMe/phone), only to find out that there aren't any tables left. We then wish we had done all this couple weeks back, but that's hardly practical.

The Loft Club removes all that hassle. Trust us to do the research, and we'll make the reservations for you every two weeks. We've started this small project to scratch our own itch for now, and we'd love to hear your feedback!


From a city perspective, Chicago should be added of course. Beyond that you should have the ability to mark restaurants, food types, and neighborhoods as no gos or desired (what if i hate chinese food, don't want to go to hyde park, or need gluten free...so basically take the different categories in yelp and add those in as well for both positive and negative). At least that's off the top of my head. Another concept would be as opposed to the current scheduling to allow me to add when i want to go in a calendaring format and let you fill it (this tuesday, next wednesday...nothing the week after, etc)


Thanks for the feedback! We are actively adding a dining preference feature, so hang tight for that.

The first iteration of the product actually had that kind of flexible scheduling in place, but we decided to simplify it for launch. We do want to add it back once demand scales up!


Honest feedback - looks like you're trying to charge me for something that's free. Calling a restaurant to make a reservation is not that big of a hassle.


But consistently planning a date night with my beautiful wife is.

If I'm planning to drop $250-300/mth on a couple of great dinners, then another $10 to add an element of surprise and save me from all the research and bookings is well worth it.

I wonder where Brisbane Australia is on their roll-out schedule... We have multiple nice restaurants now, and thankfully both are now open later than 8.30pm.


Thanks Jacob. It's our dream to be able to roll it out in Brisbane, but given the size of our team and how young the project is, it won't happen quite so soon :)

Much like the concierge services (ie Magic) out there, we want The Loft Club to provide simplify people's habits of dining out. The added element of a pleasant surprise - as you mentioned - is something we want to focus on too as we build out the service.

Happy to chat more in person, DM me @derrickko.


This should be free. They're either passing up on the money restaurants would pay to bump numbers on slow nights or getting you coming and going, as it were. (There's certainly the possibility that they want to stay ethically clean, but the cynic in me says a random startup I know nothing about is, well, a cash strapped startup).

This isn't to say that they shouldn't take restaurant money, there's certainly precedent for it and people love Yelp. Being transparent (or simply keeping quality up) would be a good check.


That's probably true for 95% of the world.

The other 5%, on the other hand, is where most of the money and VC's happen to live.


More like 99.5%/0.5% or even more extreme, but, yes.


This might seem weird- but to me, it has the same appeal as television: the selection is already made.

Choosing a restaurant to eat at is such a small barrier, but it feels huge (kinda like picking an episode on NetFlix).

I definitely see the appeal in getting an e-mail saying: "Hobotron, a table for 2 is reserved at Lait de Tétine this Thursday at 7PM." and when you show up your preferred cocktail is already on the table.

Could partner up with Uber/Limo/Whatever to provide rides to/from in the event you wish to indulge to excess.


This is the problem with ideas like loft. A lot of people think it is a good idea. They give feedback about what they would like to see in a service like this and consider pretty 'neat' at best. Then it pops off the front page and they never consider it again. Making reservations is easy. People will probably not "love" this service, because it isn't even close to essential. ITT a lot of people provide feedback about a product they will never use giving the founders a false sense of feature and product demand.


This looks neat! Signed up. Question though -- is this all $$$$+ restaurants or will you guys expand to cheaper/lesser well known joints too?


Thanks! We're starting off with the $40-$60 per head price range, and we definitely want to hit different price points.

Our selection of restaurants include both well and lesser known joints - good food exists in all places, and we want to help people discover that.


I'm someone who eats out a lot, and in the price range of what you mentioned ($50/person). I've done the Yelp search/reservation two-step many times in other cities besides my own.

My honest feedback is that this service doesn't solve a problem for me. Most of the time, the key to any reservation for me is timing. My schedule can be a little volatile (not a lot), but two weeks ahead of time doesn't solve an issue for me.

Here's what would be helpful to me: based on my preferences, shoot me a message today about an opening somewhere tomorrow. Make it a push notification, and let me reply -- if yes, book it.


Is there a way for me to tell you which restaurants I've already been to so you don't send me there?


Yup, we'll be getting around to that feature really soon. In the meantime, just email us to let us know!


OP here.

I've spent some time at Microsoft, and have only good things to say about my experience.

My qualm isn't with the company, but rather, the content, approach and flippant tone of Kevin's post. Having previously worked there, that's not something I'd expect from the company, which is disappointing.

(cross posted this back to http://blog.derrickko.com/microsoft-and-startups)


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