Amazing how such a technophobe would buy such a high tech motorbike!
I ride an electric motorcycle not because it is high tech or that I am anything remotely like a "geek" (my last computer class in college used an IBM mainframe, running FORTRAN, that you programed with punch cards), but for practical reasons. I like the lack of vibration. The fact that you don't have to warm it up before taking off. I have no love of getting gasoline splashed on me and my bike, nor do I like to pay for it. I like the quiet operation and the fact that you can ride short distances without having to worry about acids building up in the oil. After owning over 40 motorcycles, I want to ride something new and different than the usual IC vehicle. And I am getting tired of paying between $600 and $800 to have a motorcycle dealer service my bikes, because they require special tools, knowledge and proprietary computer systems to do so.
Also, I have always been interested in the history of motorcycle development and I have an entire library of old motorcycle books, including a 24-volume motorcycle encyclopedia and period road tests that go back to 1930. While I can't go back to that earlier time when even large motorcycles had pedals and were rapidly being developed and experimented on by some 300 companies in the U.S., I can get in on that sort of innovation though the current early development of electric motorcycles. I particularly, enjoy keeping up with the trials and tribulations of the various companies that are attempting to develop, manufacture and market electric vehicles.
Plus, while I know very little about computers and computer programs and how to use them, I do know a lot about motorcycles, how to maintain their chassis parts and how to ride them.