Slashdot Mirror


The Case For a Safer Smartphone

itwbennett writes: "According to the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, people who text and drive increase their chances of 'safety-critical events' by a multiple of 23.2. And new research is constantly rolling out, showing the same thing: 'We can't handle the visual, manual, and cognitive commitment of using a phone while driving,' writes blogger Kevin Purdy. What's needed, Purdy suggests, isn't more laws that will go ignored, but phones that know enough to stop giving us the distractions we ask them for: 'I think the next good phone, the next phone that makes some variant of the claim that it "Fits the way you live," needs to know that we don't know what is good for us when it comes to driving. We want to be entertained and shown new things while doing the often mundane or stressful task of driving. More specifically, those phones should know when we are driving, quiet or otherwise obscure updates from most apps, and be able to offer their most basic functions without needing to turn on a screen or type a single letter.'"

11 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. If you can learn to put a beer down while driving, by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...you can learn to put a fucking cell phone down.

    We don't need smarter apps to tell us to ignore a phone while driving.

    We don't need smarter six-packs. Or smarter makeup. Or smarter food containers. All of these things should not be mixed while steering a ton of steel down the freeway.

    We we need are smarter drivers on the road who fucking know better.

    And I agree. We don't need more laws. What we need is more real consequences like jail time for offenders so that they may wise up. Clearly current methods are not working, and Darwin award winners in this case take innocent lives with them.

  2. Statistics by Dan+East · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Until someone can explain to me how the number of accidents per million miles travelled has steadily declined for almost two decades, yet cellphones are supposedly causing people to drive like they're intoxicated or worse, I won't put much stock in these "safety-critical events" claims.

    --
    Better known as 318230.
  3. The Nanny Phone by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    needs to know that we don't know what is good for us when it comes to driving

    A) How does it know if you are a passenger or not.

    B) Phones that don't do what we want when we want are considered "broken" by most people, not "helpful".

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  4. Human beings are not born with smartphone attached by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The main problem is that we are human being, that we are *NOT* robot.

    As human beings we are the product of millions of years of evolution - an evolution that did not encounter _any_ form of electronic gadgets until very recently.

    The fact that we can drive a car (or any vehicles) is not because we *adapt* to the way the car operate, but it is another way around.

    We engineer the vehicles so that they can become our tool, and the operation of that tool is *within* our range of capability.

    While using cellphone (and now smartphone) have been accused of causing a lot of accidents, they are not the only distraction. Long before the advent of the cellphone, a lot of traffic accidents were caused by drivers adjusting their radio (either looking for station of turning up/down the volume), or adjusting the seat, or the air condition, or whatever.

    It is thus evidenced that we human beings are not made to be effective "multi-tasking" device

    And smartphones are not the only culprit - I have known drivers who were so distracted by their on-board sat nav devices such as tomtom (and other brands) they drove their car into poles, walls, and so on

    Personally when I drive, I drive. If I have to adjust my seat, my mirrors, my radio, or whatever, I stop my car at the roadside (or any other safe place) to make the adjustment, and then continue my journey.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  5. Safer phones? Seriously? by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People need to stop distracting themselves while driving. Better yet, make sure that anyone who causes damage, injury, or deaths due to their negligence while driving is fully prosecuted under the law. It's no different than driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Driving a vehicle requires responsibility as a driver.

    Let's not kid ourselves. People will just root their phones and bypass any restrictions put in place to block access to the phone while driving. And how the hell would a phone know the difference between a passenger sitting in a car and a driver?

    At it's heart, this really isn't a technology problem, but a societal one. We need to crack down on this sort of stuff, so people understand that it's simply not worth the risk to break the law. It would be awesome if software or hardware could fix all those meatware-related problems, but that's not the world we live in.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  6. Re:If you can learn to put a beer down while drivi by timholman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    we need are smarter drivers on the road who fucking know better.

    Here's the problem: we've tried to make people into better drivers since the automobile was invented. It hasn't worked. You can't change human nature.

    People still drive drunk, they still drive distracted. The main reason fatalities have dropped is only because cars are safer.

    We don't need smarter drivers. We need smarter cars ... or specifically, self-driving cars. Take the human entirely out of the equation, and only then will you see a real difference.

    We'll have self-driving cars on the road long before anyone invents a smartphone that "knows what's good for you". And when that happens, the problem of distracted driving will become completely moot.

  7. Re:Time has come to programmatically disable featu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How would the phone differentiate between the driver and passengers? How about passengers on a train? I can't see how this would work without causing a huge swath of collateral damage.

  8. Re:If you can learn to put a beer down while drivi by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Informative

    We need enforcement of current laws. I have never, never, seen anyone pulled over for talking or texting on the phone. Let alone charged for it.

    You need to go to Germany. The Autobahns are full of police cars. You can drive at any speed you like. Burn past one at 200mph? No problem.

    Tailgate? Flash lights at people? Drive like a moron in any way and they'll be down on you like a ton of bricks.

    --
    No sig today...
  9. Re:If you can learn to put a beer down while drivi by currently_awake · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We need to teach rational thinking in school. Stop indoctrinating passive consumers and start training people to THINK about their environment. Of course then people would start questioning those in power, and that isn't wanted.

  10. Re:Human Nature? by davester666 · · Score: 5, Informative

    not this stupid argument again.

    the passengers have a vested interest in not distracting the driver. and in general, they don't. and they also tend to be looking around, and are likely to alert the driver when they notice a pedestrian in front of the car, or the car is drifting onto the shoulder or into the car in the next lane.

    you can tell that it's happening when you are in the car, and you can't over the phone [or you just don't care].

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  11. Re:If you can learn to put a beer down while drivi by zephvark · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or we could cut off their hands! That would work, right? ...mandatory sentences, my ass. Haven't we had enough of "zero tolerance" rules already? They're much worse than the problems they purport to solve.