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johnnymk
08-24-2008, 06:17 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/24/technology/24digi.html?_r=1&th=&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&emc=th&adxnnlx=1219583687-RzsqYzWGJpSxAtmHpSJTzw

ANYTHING that keeps tykes pacified on long car trips, like video systems in rear seats, is a boon to automotive safety. Today, Chrysler is poised to offer in its 2009 models a new entertainment option for the children: Wi-Fi and Internet connectivity. The problem is that the entire car becomes a hotspot. The signals won’t be confined to the Nintendos in the rear seat; front-seat occupants will be able to stay online, too.

Bad idea. As drivers, we have done poorly resisting the temptation to move our eyes away from the road to check e-mail or send text messages with our cellphones. Now add laptops.

Tom Vanderbilt, the author of “Traffic,” a best-selling book about our driving habits, said last week: “We’ve already seen fatalities from people looking at their laptops while driving. It seems absolutely surprising that Chrysler would open the door for a full-blown distraction like Internet access.”

On Chrysler’s Web site, Keefe Leung, a manager in the company’s advanced connectivity technology group, explains the rationale for the service: “People are connected in their lives everywhere today. They’re connected at home, they’re connected at the office, they’re connected at Starbucks when they go for a cup of coffee.” But, he says, “the one place that they spend a lot of time that they’re not connected is in their vehicle, and we want to bring that to them.”

Clearly, for safety reasons, Mr. Leung cannot condone use of the service by drivers. When he is shown in the videos demonstrating the service, called UConnect, he always occupies a rear seat.

When I asked him last week about possible misuse of the service by drivers, he said that it was “tailored for kids in the back seat” and that the company would provide instructions to owners about its intended use.

Still, Chrysler is the company that came up with the “living room on wheels” concept for its minivans, and Mr. Leung can’t resist talking about the Internet-connected car as “another room, an extension of your home.” It isn’t, though. At my home, the living room is stationary. But on the road, my “room” may collide with yours.

In case you’re curious, the United States Transportation Department this month released the final totals for traffic accidents last year: 2.49 million people injured and 41,059 dead.

That’s just a single year’s tally. As Mr. Vanderbilt says in his book, many people have been willing to accept curtailed civil liberties as a response to terrorist threats, but many of the same people “have routinely resisted traffic measures designed to reduce the annual death toll,” like curbing cellphone use while driving.

The Transportation Department is pleased that the number of traffic deaths in 2007 was the lowest since 1994 and reflected a historic low in deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled.

But when one talks with public health groups and insurance industry representatives, one doesn’t hear jubilation. The decline in the total number of deaths obscures a more complicated story. While we have made large gains curbing alcohol-impaired driving and instilling the habit of buckling up, we have wasted most of the gains by using cellphones while driving.

Two studies, one Canadian and reported in The New England Journal of Medicine, the other Australian and reported by the British Medical Association, examined cellphone records of people injured in automobile crashes. Both studies concluded that when drivers were talking on phones, they were four times as likely to get into serious crashes.

The studies show that laws mandating the use of hands-free phones are little help: the increased risk of injury is attributable to the cognitive impairment from the phone conversation, which distracts in ways that a conversation with a seatmate does not, and was just as high for those using hands-free sets as for those with hand-held ones. (Don’t look for a similar study for the United States: the carriers refuse to supply the necessary records, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, in Arlington, Va.)

J. R. Peter Kissinger, president of the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety in Washington, calls “distracted driving” one of the leading threats to “all of us who drive or walk in this country.” Will drivers exercise good sense and not use their laptops while driving? He is not sanguine: he knows of few drivers who follow the example of a colleague, who locks her P.D.A. in the car trunk before setting out so she won’t be tempted to put it to use while driving.

A laptop will pose a similar problem, even if it remains on the lap of a front-seat passenger. Mr. Kissinger said: “I can picture two teenagers in the front and the passenger pulls up a YouTube video. I can’t imagine the driver saying, ‘I’m going to pull over and stop so I can safely watch what you’re laughing at.’”

Adrian Lund, president of the Insurance Institute, shares that concern. “Adding another electronic distraction,” he says, “is a formula for disaster.” Even if the entertainment devices are in the hands of a passenger, what will happen is perfectly predictable — “the driver will want to see,” he said.

Chrysler was not the first to endow laptops in the car with Internet connectivity; individual users have been doing on their own in any number of ways, such as by selecting laptop models with built-in cellular wireless access or by using PC cards supplied by their wireless carrier. An off-the-shelf mobile router and PC card could essentially duplicate the networking setup of UConnect Web and at a cost far less than the $495 plus installation fees that Chrysler will charge.

Which occupants in the car will most avidly use UConnect? Is it the children in the back with game consoles that provide plenty of self-contained entertainment without the Internet? Or is it the adults in the front seat, whose ability — never strong — to voluntarily remain unconnected is now disappearing?

Will we notice if our living room on wheels, fully loaded with every amenity, sails off the road?

renovation
08-24-2008, 07:36 AM
there are so many free wireless hot spots around the country now.
and i know there is a lot of people with no clue there wireless network (router)is beaming open access. im suprized there haven't been tons of reports of accident's. with drivers and laptops trying to mix while driving. i use to use microsoft streets and trips and a gateway laptop. in congested areas it would be a bit harry. keeping my eyes on the road and see the map on the laptop.
i know more then once the laptop ended up on the floor due to a panic stomp on the brakes. when i used it mostly was for long trips around the country. or vacation trips but as a owner user i think as i look back should of just bought a dash GPS unit or used road maps. as a laptop turned on in the front while driving driving. wasn't the smarts thing i ever did . even when on the passenger floor . you still have to take your eyes off the road to look at it . :(

mojo
08-25-2008, 08:48 AM
surfing on a laptop may actually be safer than surfing on the phone while driving :hmm:

Jeffbx
08-25-2008, 09:37 AM
I surf the web & check e-mail while I'm in the passenger seat - can't even imagine doing it while driving.

nate el bueno
08-25-2008, 09:47 AM
At any given time while driving, I'm usually putting on makeup, surfing the web, smoking a cigarette, drinking a beer, changing my cloths, drinking a coffee, and making out with a girl, so this doesn't worry me too much.

clutchy
08-26-2008, 08:31 PM
i surf the internet and read articles while driving. I just started doing it since i got my iphone.

i'm feeling more productive, following less closely, and i'm driving slower also which i suppose are both good.

ski
08-26-2008, 09:32 PM
I got as close to a rear-ending as I've ever been when I got my Blackberry. Since it has a trackball, you can't "memorize" keystrokes to pull up certain programs (VZ Navigator), you have to look at how far you scrolled to select things. My brain told me the stop light turned green, so I gassed it, almost into the bumper of the guy in front of me, while the light was still red.

I was so embarrassed.

Now, I either give my phone to my passenger to do it, or pull my e-brake at a stop light if I absolutely have to use it. It's dangerous to operate two machines at one time.