Yeah, but those consequences are a direct result of poor infrastructure to facilitate the technology. Not the technology itself.
The consequences are more about these light motorized vehicles interacting with either cars/trucks meant to go faster and be larger, or interacting with pedestrians or non-motorized devices.
If they had their own dedicated pavement like the other two, most(not all) of those ‘consequences’ disappear.
Yeah, but those consequences are a direct result of poor infrastructure to facilitate the technology. Not the technology itself.
The consequences are more about these light motorized vehicles interacting with either cars/trucks meant to go faster and be larger, or interacting with pedestrians or non-motorized devices.
If they had their own dedicated pavement like the other two, most(not all) of those ‘consequences’ disappear.