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]]>Q I was encouraged to see the “zombie” ads during April’s crackdown on the use of non-hands-free phone devices while driving. Did the stepped-up campaign to enforce the hands-free law yield a greater catch? Personally, I was menaced, annoyed and inconvenienced by violators in April just as much as any other month.
David Burckhard
San Jose
A Me, too. Police across the state combined to write almost 61,000 tickets last month to drivers who were using a hand-held cellphone, texting or for other distracted violations. This is up from the 52,000 tickets issued in the April 2011 crackdown and more than double the usual monthly amount.
I see more and more drivers blatantly ignore the hands-free law. Maybe they are just more visible, because it stays lighter later this time of year. But I am not alone.
Q Mr. Roadshow, in 54 years I have never called, written or contacted anyone in print, radio, etc., to offer my opinion. But I feel compelled after hearing comments and news reports of the decline of accidents because of the new cellphone laws. THEY ARE INSANE!
I have been a big-rig driver for a major freight carrier in the U.S. up and down Interstate 5 and Highway 99 five days a week for 30 years. I live these roads, and this is a fact: It is 100 times worse! Truckers once had to identify
and try to avoid drunk drivers. Now we can’t tell the difference between the drunken driver and the soccer mom with a cellphone on her lap in an attempt to conceal it from the CHP as she merges onto the highway without raising her head to notice 85 feet of big-rig trying to avoid going over the top of her.
At accident scenes, they lie in an attempt to conceal their texting. Drivers move their phones to their lap, further removing their eyes from the road. This is completely nerve-racking for truckers.
Jim Phelps
Newark
A Nerve-racking for all of us. And so is this study by the state Office of Traffic Safety that more than 10 percent of drivers are talking or texting, up from 7.3 percent in 2011. And it’s not just soccer moms blabbering on their phones.
Q I asked my teenage niece if she used her cellphone while driving, and she replied: Yes, she did. I asked her if she texted and she gave me a look that said “of course.” How do we get the message across to these kids that this practice is terribly risky?
A worried uncle
A By having a conversation with them as you tried. The OTS says it is “especially troubling” that drivers 16 to 25 talk or text at a rate of 18 percent, up from 9 percent in 2011.
“These results are disturbing, but not entirely unforeseen,” said OTS Director Christopher Murphy. “Now that smartphones are becoming (so popular), people are using them more often and in many more ways. This might be helpful in a lot of places, but definitely not behind the wheel.”
Here are more worrisome numbers in a study by researchers at UC San Diego of nearly 5,000 college and university students ages 18 to 29:
Q Gary, please get this out to the public. I just finished writing three cites for this same violation regarding the cellphone/text law. When a driver is stopped at a traffic light, stop sign or in heavy traffic, they still can’t use their cellphone unless it is an emergency. Technically, they are still driving their cars. People think that because they are not moving that they are not driving.
Tom-the-Traffic-Sgt.
A Right you are; wrong they are. To use a cellphone as a driver, you must pull over onto a city street and park.
Look for Gary at facebook.com/mr.roadshow or contact him at mrroadshow@mercurynews.com or 408-920-5335.
Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/mr-roadshow/ci_20663801/roadshow-over-61-000-cell-phone-texting-tickets?source=rss
]]>Tyndall has launched its “You Talk, You Walk … Hands-Free Devices Only While Driving” campaign in an effort to eliminate cellphone use while driving on base.
Air Force Col. William Grund, mission support group commander, told members of the media Friday that Tyndall would be vigorously enforcing cellphone and texting regulation next week.
“We are reinforcing DoD (Department of Defense) and Air Force instructions,” Grund said. “We don’t need to have distracted drivers on base.”
Grund said the base had been in the “education phase.”
“If we observe someone using their cellphone, what we are going to do is pull them over, cite ’em,” Grund said. “The first offense will be four points on their military license and suspension of on-base driving privileges for seven days. Civilians will have the same penalties, but they won’t have the points because they don’t have the military license.”
Second-time offenders will be cited and base driving privileges suspended for 30 days.
Military police do patrol parts of U.S. 98 near Tyndall, but the cellphone ban will not apply to those on the public highway.
“It’s only for individuals on the base,” Grund said. “To the best of my knowledge, Florida at this time does not have any restriction of the use of cellphones.”
Grund said that, like most people, he had been affected by drivers using cellphones.
“I think we all have stories where we see somebody (driving) erratically and you pass them and you realize they’re driving with the cellphone,” Grund said. “We’ve all observed it. We’re just trying to take a proactive stance here at Tyndall Air Force Base. We have school letting out here pretty soon. The wildlife population is starting to move across the base; bear and deer are very common.”
Grund said a vehicle struck a deer Thursday. “It was in the middle of the day,” he said.
Grund said the campaign was not Air Force-wide.
“All bases have their own campaigns,” Grund said. “Senior leadership has observed people using their cellphones at an unacceptable level and decided to start this education and enforcement campaign here at Tyndall.”
There have been complaints to base officials regarding cellphones, text messaging and “data transfers” causing distracted driving, Grund said.
Security has been briefing visitors to the base regarding the enforcement of the “handheld” device rules, Grund said.
Article source: http://www.newsherald.com/articles/tyndall-102841-launches-base.html
]]>AT&T’s Virtual Texting While Driving simulator tour visited Gateway High School in San Francisco, where students learned the risks of texting and driving first-hand. Findings from a new survey commissioned by AT&T as part of the “It Can Wait” campaign indicate that while 97 percent of teens know texting while driving is dangerous, 43 percent of teens admit to sending a text while driving – and 75 percent say it is common among their friends. When it comes to texting and driving, it can wait. That is the simple, yet vital message AT&T is sending drivers, particularly teens. To drive home the message and to make the nation’s roads and highways safer, AT&T is bringing a virtual reality simulator to high schools across the country to let students experience first-hand the dangers of texting and driving. With the 100 deadliest days for teens to be on the road about to begin, the timing couldn’t be more critical. Learn more at www.att.com
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Panama City- You may notice some new signs posted around Tyndall Air Force Base saying: “You Talk. You Walk.”
It’s all part of the new campaign launched against distracted driving.
It is now unacceptable to talk on anything, but a hands-free cell phone device while driving.
The new rule only applies to roads on the base.
It will not be enforced on drivers passing through on Highway 98, which is governed by state law.
Anyone caught driving with a cell phone in their hand can lose on-base driving privileges for seven days, and can also get four points tacked onto their military driver’s license.
Second time offenders will lose base driving privileges for 30 days.
“We don’t want to make people walk on base. We’re hoping that people will listen to us as we go through our educational phase. Distracted driving is a problem nation wide,” said Colonel William Grund, the Mission Support Commander at Tyndall.
Military officials are hoping the new restrictions will set a good example for drivers both on and off of the base.
Article source: http://www.wjhg.com/home/headlines/Tyndall_AFB_Officials_Start_Campaign_Against_Distracted_Driving_152087535.html
]]>As smartphones and tablets become more ubiquitous in our ever more mobile world, driving becomes an increasingly dangerous activity. Local and federal governments are trying to enact “hands-free” laws to keep people’s attention on the road, and devices and technologies like Bluetooth are doing their parts to keep drivers safe. Apple has created ways to make its iPhones completely hands-free (thanks to Siri and VoiceOver), but iPods, which are often the music players of choice now over in-car CD players and radio systems, still require a drivers’ hands and attention to operate.
Apple hopes to make all drivers safer with a new invention that lets users wirelessly control the music playing in their car without ever taking their hands off the steering wheel. In a patent that was quietly granted on Tuesday, Apple describes a remote control that can be clipped onto any car’s steering wheel, which borrows largely from the original iPod clickwheel but also adds a new touch-sensitive element to the design.
In its patent filing, Apple explained that most cars contain in-vehicle entertainment systems that can interface with a portable media device (like an iPod, iPhone or iPad), which essentially allows riders to control their music players through the in-car system. Yet some in-car entertainment systems can’t control an external device, so users must use the controls on the iPhone or iPod itself. This can be extremely dangerous, as adjusting iDevices takes precious attention away from the road.
Apple’s solution to this attention dilemma is a wireless remote control that can fit on any car steering wheel, which can be configured to control any portable media device. The remote is essentially a faceplate with a clickwheel identical to that of the iPod, except that this clickwheel is touch-sensitive. The sensors on the faceplate can detect pressure from a finger, but can also detect the location and magnitude of the pressure sensation thanks to a sensing mechanism based on capacitive sensing, resistive sensing, and surface acoustic wave sensing.
The remote connects to the steering wheel using hinged “clamping feet,” which can accommodate steering wheels with various thicknesses in a few ways: It can move laterally along the steering wheel, and the hinges can also move mechanically closer or farther apart to clamp onto different-sized wheels. Since the clamps at the bottom of the remote can be moved to any point in the steering wheel, the faceplate itself can be rotated in 360 degrees to accomodate any orientation on the wheel.
Apple and Cars: A Future Together
The struggling automobile industry is ripe for disruption, and Apple could definitely help in this department. While it’s great that Apple is building tools for easy and safe use of iPhone, iPod, and iPad devices while driving, Apple can do much more.
If Apple really wanted to help drivers, it would work with a company it likes (maybe Mercedes, Steve Jobs’ favorite car company) to build a better in-vehicle system for entertainment and navigation. An in-car system by Apple would be extremely intelligent, and it could show users what they need to know about their driving habits and fuel consumption while also offering plenty of options for finding locations and getting directions to them, as well as playing music — via Internet radio like Pandora or from a nearby iPod.
In fact, it looks like Apple may already taking this direction. In February, Mercedes Benz unveiled plans to use Siri, Apple’s virtual personal assistant exclusive to the iPhone 4S, to power its A-class electronics system called “Drive Kit Plus,” which will essentially let drivers access their iPhone apps while driving using voice commands. Yet, a technology company with the clout and power of Apple should not have to be a third-party accessory maker for cars. No, Apple should be thinking much bigger than that: If Apple is so set on building complete closed-end systems, maybe it should consider entering the car-making business. Apple has nothing to prove in the world of technology, but maybe if Google can perfect its driverless-car, Apple will feel compelled to build a car of its own.
Article source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/342436/20120517/apple-patents-steering-wheel-remote-control-driving.htm
]]>The Oregonian’s commuting reporter Joseph Rose puts Apple’s Siri to the test when he takes his iPhone out for a drive to try hands-free texting.
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The Montana Standard reports commissioners voted 3-1 Tuesday to expand a driving-while-texting ban that was passed two years ago. Both ordinances were proposed by eighth grade honors U.S. history students at Fred Moodry Middle School.
Police Chief Tim Barkell says officers haven’t issued a single citation since the texting ban went into effect, but Assistant Chief Bill Sather told commissioners the department will do its best to enforce the law.
In Great Falls, city commissioners are considering banning drivers from texting and talking on cellphones without a hands-free device. The Great Falls Tribune reports a proposed ordinance is expected to go to a first reading on June 19.
Article source: http://www.abcmontana.com/news/state/151712355.html
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