Touch Screens Are Distracting Drivers. What Are Carmakers Doing To Help?
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This also gets into dooring countermeasures. I remember when the guidance was "look to see if someone's opening the door and if so move outward", then "look to see if the vehicle is occupied and if so move outward." For the last 2+ decades, between mandatory headrests and tinted windows, it's extraordinarily difficult to accurately assess if a motor vehicle is occupied, so it may be best to assume 100% occupancy and ride in a location that even if a door swings suddenly open, the bicyclist won't be in the swing radius + shy distance.
Apologies for tugging the discussion slightly off-topic. You can "screen" my posts in the future.

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I'm not in the auto industry, but I'm peripherally involved with connected and automated vehicle initiatives. The technology is moving fast, and any "freezing" of standards could lock in something suboptimal or possibly ignored. Just look at how Tesla constantly provides/forces/sells updates to their vehicles' software. I have no experience with SAE standards committees, but I've seen ASTM committees that are battlegrounds for vendors' market interests, with new standards based on what everyone could minimally agree on, and sometimes just semi-blatant attempts to freeze out competitors.
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I'm not in the auto industry, but I'm peripherally involved with connected and automated vehicle initiatives. The technology is moving fast, and any "freezing" of standards could lock in something suboptimal or possibly ignored. Just look at how Tesla constantly provides/forces/sells updates to their vehicles' software. I have no experience with SAE standards committees, but I've seen ASTM committees that are battlegrounds for vendors' market interests, with new standards based on what everyone could minimally agree on, and sometimes just semi-blatant attempts to freeze out competitors.
the extent that there was standardised software it would be limited to the interfaces--the actual layout and appearance. Something like dividing the screens into quadrants where this particular function is always found on a particular section of the"page". Obvious priorities like avoiding submenus and scrolling could be served by pooling research resources, the actual implementation of this into any auto manufacturer's "operating system" would be left up to the individual company.
I found the op article to be somewhat stupid on one point. It was arguing that auto designers should be consulting tablet and phone designers to accelerate the development of the interface, but I think they're absolutely the wrong people. Their technology is designed to draw in your full attention for as long as possible, encouraging scrolling, clicking and exploring. Literally, the last things you want a driver to do.

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i don't know about you guys, but i find it less distracting to say "hey siri, directions home" than to get out a paper map, find myself, and find a route home. the instructions are called out audibly, the map follows me at an appropriate scale, and is permanently illuminated. i can't say any of those things for paper maps... yet i haven't seen a single proposal to ban paper maps (or even their use!) in cars.
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i don't know about you guys, but i find it less distracting to say "hey siri, directions home" than to get out a paper map, find myself, and find a route home. the instructions are called out audibly, the map follows me at an appropriate scale, and is permanently illuminated. i can't say any of those things for paper maps... yet i haven't seen a single proposal to ban paper maps (or even their use!) in cars.
Honestly, I don't remember what decade it was the last time I saw a paper map in a car. I used to have quite a collection. Loved the road atlas.

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I found the op article to be somewhat stupid on one point. It was arguing that auto designers should be consulting tablet and phone designers to accelerate the development of the interface, but I think they're absolutely the wrong people. Their technology is designed to draw in your full attention for as long as possible, encouraging scrolling, clicking and exploring. Literally, the last things you want a driver to do.
1. Nearly anyone who operates a vehicle on public roads considers themselves an expert in the field.
2. Drivers significantly underestimate the complexity of the task. And the AV folks are at the stage where they now know enough to start to get an idea of how much more they need to know.
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The GPSs are used for spot navigation and for ETA or finding services.

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OBD2 has been caressed to adapt modern [added] modules & DTC's, no reason to pigeonhole tech to a initial rollout of federal standards. Having the main screen display fixed menu selections, options, & such & inhibiting the entertainment touch screens from including HVAC systems, vehicle performance selections, seat controls, interior illumination systems would be a potential start. It'll increase the amount of screens, but at least the operator will know which one is the screen needed to interact with to change the temps or blower speed vs setting DST or finding the hot jams to pound on to the steering wheel during a commute.
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in the 90s, i used to love going to AAA and getting the full set of identically formatted maps at various scales for whatever region i was traveling to!
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The AAA Trip-Tik was really the way to go back in the day for a long road trip. As a kid in the early 90s I got to be the navigator for some cross-country trips with those, fond memories.

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i don't know about you guys, but i find it less distracting to say "hey siri, directions home" than to get out a paper map, find myself, and find a route home. the instructions are called out audibly, the map follows me at an appropriate scale, and is permanently illuminated. i can't say any of those things for paper maps... yet i haven't seen a single proposal to ban paper maps (or even their use!) in cars.


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either your time is a lot less precious, or perhaps you live somewhere with no traffic and few ways to get from point A to point B?

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I'm always amazed at the "traffic hour" in WI vs my local area. Even a Sunday night in my area has more traffic than a Friday afternoon in WI.
If a paper map did illuminate, i'd think that is called a paper fire?
If a paper map did illuminate, i'd think that is called a paper fire?
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You ever driven in New England? The road system here is the proverbial plate of spaghetti. I have a job that takes me all over the state, and once you get off the interstates, there aren't a lot of straight lines. Taking a wrong turn without GPS is definitely the beginning of an ordeal. We all don't live on a Great Plains grid, you know.

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need? rarely. benefit from it? often. i’ve not yet seen a paper map which shows live traffic, nor do i have some magic intuition which tells me which of several routes to any destination has the least traffic.
either your time is a lot less precious, or perhaps you live somewhere with no traffic and few ways to get from point A to point B?
either your time is a lot less precious, or perhaps you live somewhere with no traffic and few ways to get from point A to point B?

He's in Burlington, Iowa. Heavy traffic for him is when the trains come through town.

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Just want to say I appreciate you and phughes taking the time to discuss our disagreements. I've enjoyed this conversation and appreciate your perspectives on this.

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need? rarely. benefit from it? often. i’ve not yet seen a paper map which shows live traffic, nor do i have some magic intuition which tells me which of several routes to any destination has the least traffic.
either your time is a lot less precious, or perhaps you live somewhere with no traffic and few ways to get from point A to point B?
either your time is a lot less precious, or perhaps you live somewhere with no traffic and few ways to get from point A to point B?


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I find it interesting that with all the technology that goes into F1 racing, the critical functions are still controlled by knobs and buttons. The digital display just tells them where the buttons currently are.
Can you imagine the average driver getting into his/her grocery getter and seeing something like this?

Can you imagine the average driver getting into his/her grocery getter and seeing something like this?



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Yes, I know on line map services have many features and uses but you posted about the need/usefulness of such devices for finding your way home, not traffic reports or traveling in locations far from home. I responded to what you posted, not what you may have been thinking about.
Your pointless nitpicking knows no limits. If one is driving far away from home, one does often need the gps to find the road pointing back home. BTW, traffic reports are very useful for finding your way home in a reasonable amount of time, so your nitpick is just dumb semantics.

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Two things I've learned in a career in traffic engineering is:
1. Nearly anyone who operates a vehicle on public roads considers themselves an expert in the field.
2. Drivers significantly underestimate the complexity of the task. And the AV folks are at the stage where they now know enough to start to get an idea of how much more they need to know.
1. Nearly anyone who operates a vehicle on public roads considers themselves an expert in the field.
2. Drivers significantly underestimate the complexity of the task. And the AV folks are at the stage where they now know enough to start to get an idea of how much more they need to know.
I used to be professionally involved with crime policy research, so I'm very familiar with the everyone thinks they're an expert phenomenon. Feel free to call me on it when I'm obviously blabbing above my nonexistent pay grade. I'm definitely engaging in nonexpert musing here, but imo so was the op article.

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Yes, I know on line map services have many features and uses but you posted about the need/usefulness of such devices for finding your way home, not traffic reports or traveling in locations far from home. I responded to what you posted, not what you may have been thinking about.
i've lived in the same area my whole life, i know my way home. i do not know what the traffic is like 30 miles away nor which of dozens of route has the least sum amount of traffic.
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If they paid you guys for arguing posts you'd all be wildly wealthy. Closed.
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