What does the phrase "hang on for the ride" mean?

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japanjapan

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Dear teachers,
I met a sentence today, and I could not understand the phrase:hang on for the ride.
The original sentence is :
"What we are looking at now is just the first generation," says Stephen Benton of MIT's Media Lab. In that case, the best advice is: hang on for the ride.
The article containing the sentence comes from Newsweek may 31, 1993.
I look forward to your reply.
Yours
Japanjapan
 

Rover_KE

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My guess:

'Watch out for new and exciting developments.'

Rover
 

TheParser

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***** NOT A TEACHER *****


Hello, Japanjapan:

In addition to Rover's excellent answer, I thought that you would enjoy this quotation:

"Keep your seat belt on. There are a lot of twists and turns [in life]."

 

BobK

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My guess:

'Watch out for new and exciting developments.'

Rover
:up: Think of a theme park/fun fair. 'Hang on' is a reference to what your hands do; that's why the wilder rides are sometimes called 'white-knuckle rides'. (Which in turn makes people demonstrate their fearlessness by conspicuously not hanging on.)

b
 
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