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"Another reason why privacy could be just a passing fad, terrorism is going to get too good. [1997]"
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The traveling-chariots were handy; they could also be attached to each other in a long line, which could then be hauled by a train:
As far as I know, the first steam-powered vehicle was created in the late 18th century. In 1769, Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot, a French inventor, built a steam-powered "tricycle". It was designed for military purposes to haul cannons.
Compare to the moving roadway from H.G. Wells' 1899 story When the Sleeper Wakes and the rolling roads from The Roads Must Roll (1940) by Robert Heinlein. The first commercial passenger conveyor belt was built in 1954 (by Goodyear for the Hudson and Manhattan railroad).
By the way, the "electric stairway", or escalator, was introduced in 1900.
See also the speed belt (ribbon conveyor) from Slaves of Mercury (1932) by Nat Schachner.
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