We're going live shortly... Just press play!

Send press releases, job openings & all inquiries to info@pugetsoundradio.com


Puget Sound Radio® Communicates - Advertise with PSR and get results you want! Contact: Michael Easton


Hands on the Wheel, Not on BlackBerry Keys
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.




Puget Sound Radio®    GENERAL CHAT    General Chat  ›  Hands on the Wheel, Not on BlackBerry Keys
Users Browsing Forum
improsteve, Raydeeo, screener and 7 Guests

Hands on the Wheel, Not on BlackBerry Keys  This thread currently has 190 views. Print
1 Pages 1 Recommend Thread
crazy horse
May 13, 2007, 5:20am Report to Moderator
Baby Member
.


                              Hands on the Wheel, Not on the BlackBerry Keys



By MATT RICHTEL
Do u txt whl drvng?
nytimes.com
May 12, 2007



If you are doing so in Washington State, cease and desist, or risk a fine.

Gov. Christine Gregoire signed the nation’s first law yesterday to ban “D.W.T.” — driving while texting with a cellphone, BlackBerry or other mobile device.

“Would you read a book or newspaper while you were driving? No!” Governor Gregoire said. “Then why would you text while driving?”

New Jersey is asking, too. The Legislature is considering a bill to outlaw D.W.T. (one of its sponsors, Paul D. Moriarty, admitted to sometimes using his BlackBerry while driving).

Some states already ban talking on a cellphone behind the wheel unless a headset is used, and Washington joined that group yesterday. But while reading or other distracting activities may not actually be illegal behind the wheel, more legislators seem to be worried about the danger of multitaskers tapping away without coming to a stop.

Mobile texters in the United States sent 158 billion messages last year, up 95 percent from 2005, according to industry statistics. There is no data on how many are typed or read by drivers, or how often the activity leads to collisions.

There are, though, documented cases of texting-related crashes, including one that prompted the law in Washington. A driver, apparently fixated on his BlackBerry, slammed his van into the car in front of him last December, causing a five-vehicle pileup, state officials said.

Not everyone advocates legislation. Jonathan Adkins, spokesman for the Governors Highway Safety Association, said that such laws, while well intended, were difficult for police to detect or enforce.

In Washington, the penalty for D.W.T. is a $101 fine (the proposed fine in New Jersey is $250). But the crime is a secondary offense, meaning a driver must be pulled over for some more grievous infraction.

“There’s a challenge for law enforcement,” Governor Gregoire said.

For some, the greater challenge may be to exercise impulse control on the road.

James Katz, director of the Center for Mobile Communications Studies at Rutgers University, says he doubts that many multitaskers will keep both hands on the wheel.

“Only the most angelic drivers,” he said, “will be able to resist the temptation.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/12/technology/12text.html?_r=1&oref=login
Logged Offline
Private Message
pave
May 13, 2007, 1:01pm Report to Moderator
Maximum Member
I've noticed in myself that I simply can't drive and talk on the cell at the same time.

I mean, I can do it, but I also notice my concentration on both diminshes - radically.

So, I just quit paying attention to the road!
Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 1 - 3
spiffiness
May 13, 2007, 1:21pm Report to Moderator
Big Member
Yeah, traffic in general is *highly overrated*...

Maybe it's just how evolved the technology has become in Europe and Asia but I am surprised more automakers aren't incorporating handsfree bluetooth capability in their vehicles.  I am about to buy a new vehicle and specifically requested an after-market system be installed because the vehicle didn't even have the option.  If I spent an additional $15,000 I could get the luxury model of the car I was looking for with Bluetooth as standard equipment.  

And not all Bluetooth sets allow you to handsfree digit dial either (speak numbers to the system instead of names already programmed).
Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 2 - 3
wisemonkey
May 14, 2007, 3:50am Report to Moderator
Big Member
I find a bluetooth really helps with concentration when driving and carrying on a phone conversation.  Even better than an old style handsfree.
Logged Offline
Private Message Reply: 3 - 3
1 Pages 1 Recommend Thread
Print

Puget Sound Radio®    GENERAL CHAT    General Chat  ›  Hands on the Wheel, Not on BlackBerry Keys



Powered by E-Blah Forum Software 10.3.6 © 2001-2008