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posted by janrinok on Friday September 10 2021, @05:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the time-for-head-up-displays? dept.

The Screens in Cars Are Becoming a Problem:

You're driving and you're bored. Tired of staring at the road, your eyes drift toward the polished touchscreen to the right of your steering wheel—what the auto industry calls your "infotainment" system. First you scroll through its menus to select a pump-me-up playlist; then you use its mapping tool to reroute toward a nearby Starbucks.

Sounds like a typical driving experience these days. Sure, you temporarily looked away from the road while tapping through the infotainment system, but that's no big deal. Right?

Well, it could be. You might have been distracted for as long as 40 seconds while changing your destination, according to an analysis by the AAA Foundation—long enough to cover half a mile at 50 mph. As for choosing playlists, one study found that drivers selecting music with Apple CarPlay or Android Auto had slower reaction times than those who were high from smoking pot.

"Today's infotainment systems can be as distracting—if not more so—than personal electronic devices," says Jennifer Homendy, the newly confirmed chair of the National Transportation Safety Board. The federal government blames distraction for around 10 percent of the 38,680 annual traffic fatalities in the United States, but that's almost certainly an underestimate, since people aren't inclined to admit they were fiddling with a phone or a navigation system prior to a crash.

The problem isn't necessarily that infotainment displays are now a standard feature of all new vehicles; in theory, at least, they're preferable to drivers squinting to read a phone while operating a vehicle. But these systems are rapidly becoming glitzier, more complicated, and just plain bigger, with some resembling supersized tablets attached to your car console. Meanwhile, they're essentially unregulated.

Staff at the federal National Highway Traffic Safety Administration are aware of infotainment's risk of distraction, and they have advised carmakers to avoid egregiously dangerous designs and functionalities. But carmakers know that infotainment presents one of their best chances to stand out from competitors. "When you go to a dealership, it's almost a given that the car will have a five-star crash rating, and that it accelerates and brakes quickly," says Kelly Funkhouser, the head of connected and automated vehicles at Consumer Reports. "What makes a difference in the car you actually pick is the infotainment system." That becomes even more true in a world of electric vehicles, which lack much of the sound and feel that seem to confer a unique character on cars with internal-combustion engines. (MotorTrend's ranking of the model year's best "exhaust sounds" doesn't work for electric vehicles that emit no exhaust.)

Journal Reference:
David G. Kidd, Jonathan Dobres, Ian Reagan, et al. Considering visual-manual tasks performed during highway driving in the context of two different sets of guidelines for embedded in-vehicle electronic systems, Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trf.2017.04.002)


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by deimtee on Friday September 10 2021, @07:49AM (2 children)

    by deimtee (3272) on Friday September 10 2021, @07:49AM (#1176526) Journal

    You could do even better. Nobody should be doing 100mph in a city. If it wasn't for traffic you could completely cross a fairly big city in an hour at 35 mph (60kmh). That's probably way faster than in traffic now. Most of that traffic is single-person commuting.

    Create a City Zone. Inside that zone, mandate a maximum net vehicle weight of 300 kg and a hard limited maximum speed of 35 mph. Maximum width of 4 feet. Don't care how many wheels it has. You are going to get bikes, trikes, bubbles on wheels, things that look like Flintstone cars, things out of The Jetsons, etc. The main thing is they will be small. Split every lane in two. Instant doubling of throughput. The streets will also become a lot more friendly to pushbikes, reducing traffic and pollution further. Parking spots will be able to hold three or more vehicles, letting you park much closer, and re-purpose all that wasted land.

    Have separate licence and registration for Commercial Vehicles for freight. Inside the Zone, they have a max speed of 20kmh, but also the right to take up two lanes. If you really want to cut pollution, make them all electric too.

    --
    If you cough while drinking cheap red wine it really cleans out your sinuses.
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 10 2021, @10:03AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 10 2021, @10:03AM (#1176553)

    Yeah, and ban everything i don't like!

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 10 2021, @02:32PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 10 2021, @02:32PM (#1176626)

    More lanes != more throughput.

    In fact I'm convinced that it's the opposite. Outside of accidents / blockage, the fewer lanes the faster the flow.

    More lanes just gives more people an opportunity to try to change lanes and weave through the traffic, cutting people off in the process and causing said traffic.