US Agency Aims To Regulate Map Aids In Vehicles
An anonymous reader writes in with news about proposed rules regarding mapping technology used in cars.Many are in favor of rules that prevent texting while driving, but in-car navigation is a murkier legal area — how do you minimize distractions without limiting the ability to get from point A to point B? Like it or not, the US government may settle that debate before long. The proposed Grow America Act would let the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) set rules for dash-mounted GPS units, smartphone mapping apps and anything else you'd use for driving directions. While it's not clear what the NHTSA would do with its power, the Department of Transportation's voluntary guidelines ask for limits on eye-catching visuals (think videos) and interaction times; don't be surprised if these enter the rulebooks.
They want to regulate mapping apps on smartphones, including those not installed in vehicles? Seems like more than a bit of a stretch.
So long speed trap alerts in Waze.
Can we also get rid of animating billboards? Those slideshow transitions are distracting when driving since the brain pays attention to movement.
The NHTSA has finally caught up with me.
Around 2001 or so I rigged a pair of laptops with GPS and Wifi (high tech!) so they relayed coordinates to each other and ran a star-trek esque battle game. The passenger would hold the laptop which showed the opponents position and shields as well as weapons fire. They would feed information to the driver who would dodge virtual torpedoes.
A few friends of mine tested this out, but I abandoned the project because this surely would have killed people.