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#21
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 11:39:11 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: On Sep 19, 10:30?am, Vic Smith wrote: Ever open or look at a map while you were driving? Yes, after pulling into a rest area or a parking lot. I'd never try to read a map while on the road. I have, and suspect many others have too. A voice would be less of a distraction. Seems to me GPS should be a net winner in the distraction arena, but I used to lunch with a guy who would look down at console mounted GPS as we drove to lunch. Unnecessary, since we were going to well-known local eateries. I should have asked him why he was doing that. That can be a problem with "toys." --Vic Exactly. People can get so caught up in playing with something that they can forget their primary responsibility to themselves and others- safe and accident free driving. You just have to forego the distractions. You can pull over before looking at a GPS screen if you think that's best. I do. I won't talk on the phone while driving, and if I connect with one of my kids on their cell the first thing I say is "Are you driving?" If yes, I tell them we'll talk later. --Vic |
#22
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 12:32:00 -0500, dt wrote:
Froggie wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 07:08:30 -0400, "D.Duck" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 06:26:11 -0400, "D.Duck" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message news:28t1f3lfsat37gkf3mq32bigp0drbotdqa@4ax. com... On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 03:04:38 -0700, wrote: 3. Set notifications for your travel route- No more missing an exit on a freeway, and then taking a 3-mile detour! Your GPS navigator can guide you along the way so that you don't miss any turns or highway exits... http://personaltechinfo.googlepages....e_your_new_gps Wow - is that right? What other amazing tricks do these devices do? They inform you when you've arrived at your destination! No kidding. Do they show you where you are real time? Only if your navigator in the passenger seat follows along on the Rand McNally with his finger at the proper time scale relative to the speed your are traveling. Damn - well, that's disappointing. It's no wonder people can't remember anything as they get older...they depend on their electronic devices for everything. And they blame it on Alzheimer's! Ha! Did you check out her little webpage? Try doing this: "2. Locate your parked vehicle- if you forget the spot where you parked your car, a GPS device can easily locate it for you." with your built-in GPS! Ahem... I listen to WEEI a lot in the morning - sports talk - as background. They had a very interesting discussion about the new Patriots parking schema for Gillete Stadium while they are bulding Patriot's Place (where the new Bass Pro Shops is going - WHOO HOO!!) and one of the callers related his experience of losing his car (not being familiar with the new layout which, as I understand it, is quite confusing). Guess how he located his car? A portable GPS. :) When he arrived, he took his GPS with him (for anti-theft purposes) and when he got lost on exiting the stadium, in a fit of genius, turned his GPS on and designated the last position - led him right to the correct parking lot and his car. Soooooo..... I guess she was right. :) |
#23
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 09:34:59 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: On Sep 19, 8:54?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 08:05:44 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Sep 19, 3:04?am, wrote: 3. Set notifications for your travel route- No more missing an exit on a freeway, and then taking a 3-mile detour! Your GPS navigator can guide you along the way so that you don't miss any turns or highway exits...http://personaltechinfo.googlepages....e_your_new_gps 4. Get so damn distracted playing with the buttons and watching the screen that you run into somebody else, with injury or death a possible result. You mean like distracted listening to the radio or CD player? Or your cell phone? They are no more or no less dangerous than any other car compartment device. Including air conditioning. We've got one of those devices built into the wife's 400H. It has a safety feature included that makes it impossible to do very much with the screen unless the transmission is in Park. I'd be astonished to learn that the portable units selling for a few hundred bucks and plugging into the 12V cig-lighter fitting are similarly equipped. The Lexus also has a "voice recognition" system that allows the driver to name a pre-programmed destination, say "begin guidance", and then the system will give verbal instructions that don't require looking at the screen. "Take next exit, 1 mile ahead", "Take exit in 1/2 mile", "Take exit 200 yards ahead", "Exit now, turn right at end of ramp...." No visual interaction with the screen required. Why in blazes would anybody mount something on top of the dashboard, where it would block vision whether in use or not? All portable devices have the ability to turn off the device, or cause it to go dormant, at or above a certain speed. Mine also has voice recognition, but I don't use it. I can also use it to stream data from traffic cams, hook it into my cell phone and have automatic reroutes based on traffic reports - all done automatically. Cost me $200. Your review mirror is mounted on the windshield and if you have a toll pass system (like EZ Pass) that has to be mounted on the windshield. And if your state goes to milage based usage fees for highways based on GPS, you are going to see a lot of windshield mounted devices for those autos that don't have accesible data from a GPS. My GPS is located on my dash board in plain view and blocks nothing of my vision. I would be happy to supply you with an image of same. I see the near collisions, disregard for rules of the road, unsafe passing, and failure to moderate wake when appropriate that result from people allowing the electro nav stuff to run their boats. I would be more concerned at the amount of drug or alcohol impaired drivers than somebody playing with their GPS. I'm not in favor of any distractions while driving, including those that you meniton. The point is, and I'm just having a discussion here, not trying to score points, is that anything is distracting while driving a car. For instance, car wrecks. Why do you think that traffic jams happen even when the accident is on the other side of a six lane interstate? Would you believe that is a contributing factor to accidents? Or a pollice cruiser on the side of the road writing a ticket? One of the major fears of a State Trooper is being rear ended during a traffic stop and that's because he/she is a distraction. Or take music for instance. Or a particularly heated discussion on your favorite talk radio station on a subject you are invested in - like, say, banning recrational cruising boats (which in my view, should be all converted to outboards). Or your wife. I assume that you talk to your wife while driving - is that distracting? Having a hands free device on your cell phone is not going to remove the distraction - anymore than talking to your wife. Or the radio. You have to change stations on a long trip - how distracting is that? I have remote control for my Sirius - don't have to take my eyes off the road at all - I'd posit that my music changes are safer than yours. Our state has passed a ban on hand-held cell phones in cars that takes effect next January. I've been guilty of using my cell phone on the road- but I'm switching to one of those blue tooth things (that looks like an insect landed on your ear) so I can keep both hands on the wheel and both eyes on the road. Well, I would say that it's not the device, but the user. I was an early adopter of the cell phone when they actually looked like telephones - ain't had no accident yet. And, from time-to-time, I install one of my ham radios in the truck and drive down the road using Morse Code as my preferred communications mode. Haven't had an accident yet. I think the whole issue is over blown. Now, having said that, I would be remiss without mentioning the epidemic of text messaging while driving that seems to be infecting the teen agers. We've had several fatal accidents in CT (and in surrounding states) where texting teens have manged not only to kill themselves but others. Difference between rearview mirror and a dashboard mounted device of any kind is pretty significant. It's been an incredibly long time since I have seen a rear view mirror mounted on the dashboard. Most are mounted near the top of the windshield. Imagine a 4-foot tall kid crossing in front of your car near a grade school. The kid's head will be visible *under* the rear view mirror, but might not be visible *over* the top of some accessory suction cupped to the top of the dash. Ok, just for the sake of discussion, this is a image of the interior of my truck, in my normal seat position, taken not from the rear LCD, but through the viewfinder so simulate my view over the hood as closely as possible. http://www.swsports.org/images/dashboard.jpg What's more distracting? Mind you, I had that mirror moved up 1.5 inches when I bought the truck. We normally don't run into things that we can see, assuming we aren't too distracted to notice. Blocking vision for even several inches near the driver projects out to a pretty large blind spot. How many times do we hear, "I don't know where that other car came from! I swear I didn't see it!" following an accident? I believe that a lot of people involved in accidents really didn't see the other vehicle- for one reason or another and many of the reasons could have been avoided. Well, Duh... My specific concerns with the extension of GPS plotters to cars are the inclusion of an additional driving distraction and in some cases additionally impaired visibility from the driver's seat. And my concern is that at some point, you have to take responsibility for your own actions and that safe driving is one of them. Anything can be a distraction and unless we can design a car that is a complete cocoon of some sort, the only way is to drive safely - not as an act of legislation, but as an act of personal responsibility. I have had one accident in 40+ years of driving and it was literally the other guys fault - I was rear ended at a stop light because he was drunk off his ass. I rest my case. :) |
#24
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 11:39:11 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: Exactly. People can get so caught up in playing with something that they can forget their primary responsibility to themselves and others- safe and accident free driving. Ahem - I'll say it again. See if this makes some sense to you. Drive safely and responsibly. I would think that's it's a pretty simple concept. |
#25
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 12:30:56 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote: I used to lunch with a guy who would look down at console mounted GPS as we drove to lunch. Unnecessary, since we were going to well-known local eateries. I should have asked him why he was doing that. That can be a problem with "toys." Admittedly, but it's the same with anything - you eventually get used to dealing with it. And to tell the truth, if you are heading off to the local bistro that you visit on a regular basis and turn on the GPS to watch yourself get there is pretty loony. Heck, it's a toy for me, but even I don't do that. :) |
#26
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 12:19:26 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote: I'm thinking about getting a GPS, but can't justify the cost for the driving I do. OTOH, if it will do double duty on a boat I might just go for it now. What's good for both car and boat, or is there such an animal? I have been told that there are Garmin units that will do that. I'm not familiar with the Garmin product line so I can't say. |
#27
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 20:47:51 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 12:30:56 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: I used to lunch with a guy who would look down at console mounted GPS as we drove to lunch. Unnecessary, since we were going to well-known local eateries. I should have asked him why he was doing that. That can be a problem with "toys." Admittedly, but it's the same with anything - you eventually get used to dealing with it. And to tell the truth, if you are heading off to the local bistro that you visit on a regular basis and turn on the GPS to watch yourself get there is pretty loony. Heck, it's a toy for me, but even I don't do that. :) I think he was proud of it, and enjoyed the oohs and ahs. It *was* a nice unit. He also had a PDA he would plug into his desktop at work to transfer Outlook stuff. I had much heavier responsibilities than he, and managed to avoid portable hardware until nearly the end. Point is, some people enjoy gadgets, others don't. More important in terms of "distractions" is how different peoples' minds handle them. I've always felt I don't handle them well in some circumstances, and I put driving in that category. Maybe I just took that stance after my best bud was killed when he wrecked his car about the same time a close cousin did the same. Might be habit, but it works for me. I mention the "mind" piece because I've known a number of guys who could hear 5 different conversation going on in a bar, while it's all a din to me. People handle distractions differently, and define them differently. --Vic |
#28
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 08:05:44 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: On Sep 19, 3:04?am, wrote: 3. Set notifications for your travel route- No more missing an exit on a freeway, and then taking a 3-mile detour! Your GPS navigator can guide you along the way so that you don't miss any turns or highway exits...http://personaltechinfo.googlepages....e_your_new_gps 4. Get so damn distracted playing with the buttons and watching the screen that you run into somebody else, with injury or death a possible result. You mean like distracted listening to the radio or CD player? Or your cell phone? They are no more or no less dangerous than any other car compartment device. Including air conditioning. We've got one of those devices built into the wife's 400H. It has a safety feature included that makes it impossible to do very much with the screen unless the transmission is in Park. I'd be astonished to learn that the portable units selling for a few hundred bucks and plugging into the 12V cig-lighter fitting are similarly equipped. The Lexus also has a "voice recognition" system that allows the driver to name a pre-programmed destination, say "begin guidance", and then the system will give verbal instructions that don't require looking at the screen. "Take next exit, 1 mile ahead", "Take exit in 1/2 mile", "Take exit 200 yards ahead", "Exit now, turn right at end of ramp...." No visual interaction with the screen required. Why in blazes would anybody mount something on top of the dashboard, where it would block vision whether in use or not? All portable devices have the ability to turn off the device, or cause it to go dormant, at or above a certain speed. Mine also has voice recognition, but I don't use it. I can also use it to stream data from traffic cams, hook it into my cell phone and have automatic reroutes based on traffic reports - all done automatically. Cost me $200. Your review mirror is mounted on the windshield and if you have a toll pass system (like EZ Pass) that has to be mounted on the windshield. And if your state goes to milage based usage fees for highways based on GPS, you are going to see a lot of windshield mounted devices for those autos that don't have accesible data from a GPS. My GPS is located on my dash board in plain view and blocks nothing of my vision. I would be happy to supply you with an image of same. I see the near collisions, disregard for rules of the road, unsafe passing, and failure to moderate wake when appropriate that result from people allowing the electro nav stuff to run their boats. I would be more concerned at the amount of drug or alcohol impaired drivers than somebody playing with their GPS. With all these new electronic automotive items, would it be smart for the auto industry to build a shelf into the grill with built in connectors to mount all these new gadgets coming down the pike? |
#29
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 10:43:50 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: Do they show you where you are real time? If you're moving they show you where you were - important difference. |
#30
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 16:23:28 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote: I mention the "mind" piece because I've known a number of guys who could hear 5 different conversation going on in a bar, while it's all a din to me. People handle distractions differently, and define them differently. Oh yeah. Mrs. Wave can hold a telephone conversation, watch Jeopardy, keep an eye on the newspaper and god knows what else - she's the definitive multi-tasker. Me? I'm a literal type - one or two things at a time. I do not multi-task well. But I'm a great tactical thinker and have the ability to concentrate to the exclusion of everything else. Odd the way that works. |
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