I've been taking the light rail from my home in Mesa to downtown Phoenix, which is about a 40 minute commute. Not bad traffic wise. The only downside is that I live 3 miles from the nearest platform, and my school is about 2 miles from a platform on the other end. Walking easily doubles my commute, and that's not cool.
So, in order to kill two birds with one stone, I've caught myself thinking about... *gulp* a non-powered bicycle.

At first I was cool with one of those cheap $129 mountain bikes. Looked at a cycle shop and encountered the other end: $2000 to $10,000 bikes with salesmen insisting that there is no good bicycle under $1,500 and if I couldn't afford that I had no 'real' interest in riding. Sheesh! Then I saw an interesting bike that looked fun: It was a Pure Fix brand "Fixie" bike. Now, I've never been one for anything popular with wannabe hipsters, but this did look sharp, and WAY lighter than I remembered my mountain bike being when I was a Freshman in college in the 90's.
The salesman was REALLY dogging on the bike, calling it "clunky" and "cheap", but just knowing what I do about motorbikes, it looked decent from the start. Not fancy mind you, but it also came with brakes (which seems to be a negative feature from the salesman's point of view, but I stopped listening to him 10 minutes prior), which other fixie bikes didn't. And, it didn't look like a bike stripped down in someone's backyard garden shed with a $800 price tag on it.
I'm not looking for anything fancy, but this looked the business, seemed light and durable and the price was closer to palatable. I know I come from a motor culture and the idea that a bicycle that costs more than a cheap car or motorbike is just foreign and disturbing, but this bike did seem far better built than the China-mart stuff.
So, any bicyclists on here have any sage advice for a casual commuter? I know we have some pretty hardcore bike riders on here, and as a motorcyclist this seemed like the more friendly spot to ask than some of the other bicycle forms (with some who have some pretty strong hate for newbies and those who aren't anti-motor it seems... Guess there's that type in any sport or hobby) $3-400 may not seem like much, but I'll be foregoing an AK-47 project to get this next semester, so I want to make sure my money is being well spent for my needs.