That’s what I think too. The MY18-19 Kenevo X-wing is not a disposable item.I have a 2018 Kenevo and I’m not persuaded that any other bike on the market would be an improvement for my riding (new Kenevo, too DH orientated, new Levo, too cross country, SL, not enough powe) BUT, I would like a bigger battery as mine is too often virtually out at end of ride. More importantly, I worry that when the battery is worn out, which could be several years, will I still be able to get another one and will I want to shell out a lot of money for a 500 battery when the standard has grown to 1000? I’m already in my second motor and again will I want to shell out for another motor by which time there might be motors that are half the weight of my own? As for selling second hand, will anyone be interested in buying an ebike with 4, 5 or 6 year old technology?
With rapidly changing battery tech, not to mention modern built-in obsolescence technology, it’s difficult to see it as anything else but disposable unfortunately - unless there is backward compatibility - and there’s no sign of that up to this point.
There is one solution though. Once the battery and other proprietary systems are legacy & no longer supported, Open Source them! All our base are belong to you. An open ecosystem for hardware, firmware & software has many advantages, especially for legacy though otherwise still viable technologies. Third parties can then step in if there’s the demand.