All new cars must have the devices from 7 July, adding fuel economy as well as safety. Will mpg become the new mph?

In the highway code and the law courts, there is no doubt what those big numbers in red circles mean. As a quick trip up any urban street or motorway with no enforcement cameras makes clear though, many drivers still regard speed signs as an aspiration rather than a limit.

Technology that will be required across Europe from this weekend may change that culture, because from 7 July all new cars sold in the EU and in Northern Ireland must have a range of technical safety features fitted as standard. The most notable of these is intelligent speed assistance – or colloquially, a speed limiter.

The rest of the UK is theoretically free, as ministers once liked to put it, to make the most of its post-Brexit freedoms, but the integrated nature of car manufacturing means new vehicles here will also be telling their drivers to take their foot off the accelerator. Combining satnav maps with a forward camera to read the road signs, they will automatically sound an alarm if driven too fast for the zone they are in.

  • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    13 days ago

    Will mpg become the new mph?

    No because Europeans use neither mpg nor mph. 🤭

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    This sounds like blown up bullshit.
    How does this speed limiter work exactly, I don’t see that mentioned anywhere.
    If I drive Autobahn it’s not the same as driving passed a school in the city. How does the speed limiter know the speed limit?
    To know that accurately, sounds like a somewhat expensive mandatory piece of equipment.
    And how come I have heard absolutely zero about this from either car reviewers or local news media?

    I looked it up for my country (Denmark), these are NOT mandatory that I can find, and they can ONLY be installed by public authorized shops, and from the paperwork required, it seems like the installer decides the limit, there are no mandatory limits.

    So it seems like the whole story is bullshit.

    EDIT:

    https://road-safety-charter.ec.europa.eu/resources-knowledge/media-and-press/intelligent-speed-assistance-isa-set-become-mandatory-across

    Intelligent speed assistance seems to be a thing, but this is a pretty crucial part:

    The ISA system is required to work with the driver and not to restrict his/her possibility to act in any moment during driving. The driver is always in control and can easily override the ISA system.

    From the OP the Guardian article:

    Drivers of most new cars will be familiar with similar features already installed, but they are currently easy to override.

    Yes and that’s how it will continue to be with Intelligent speed assistance.

    Article is bullshit these are NOT speed limiters, which is a completely different thing, despite that I can see numerous articles in English erroneously calling this speed limiters, when it’s nothing of the sort.

    Otherwise, what’s an ACTUAL speed limiter called? You know like what is popular in many new cars, that have speed limiters that prevent you from driving faster than for instance 160 km/h.

    • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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      12 days ago

      In Canada we call them engine governors and they’ve been around for decades (mostly on semis/tractor trailer units).

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        I know most Mercedes cars have had speed limiters for many years, but those were traditionally at 250 km/h.
        An engine governor sounds more like preventing revving it to high.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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      12 days ago

      “Combining satnav maps with a forward camera to read the road signs, they will automatically sound an alarm if driven too fast for the zone they are in.”

      “From now on, however, cars will be designed with systems that are impossible to permanently turn off, restarting each time the engine does. Will car lovers see this as pure progress?”

      It doesn’t sound hard to disable… speakers only have 2 wires. Snip-Snip.

      You aren’t disabling the system, that still works fine, it just has no output.

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Well it will be harder to argue against fines etc. you where warned and either ignored the warning or disabled the warning and accepted the risk.

      With the height of fines in some countries…

      I’d imagine the next step will the even stricter measurements, harsher fines and more SPECS.

  • middlemanSI@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    The one thing nobody is fixing is the constant phone use in cars. This issue is far more common than speeding and creates jams and dangerous situations all the time. Makes me hate being a part of traffic. I tend to speed by about 10% on highways but never in 30 and 50 zones. The very idea of a “smart” car taking control of my brake, throttle or steering makes me wanna barf.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Cars are, themselves, the problem. We’ve created a two ton rolling death machine and now we’re stuck adding more and more features to address the original sin of unleashing them across the country to begin with.

      The very idea of a “smart” car taking control of my brake, throttle or steering makes me wanna barf.

      Its that, or people will be forced to endure the unlimited nightmare indignity of taking the train/bus.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      My car lets me set a threshold - currently +7mph. I can see on the dashboard when I’ve exceeded my self-imposed threshold, vs when I am between that and the actual speed limit. Actually I wish it would do a bit more, like turn yellow.

      I also ignore it in crowded areas, and pedestrian crossings, school zones, construction zones with people working, etc.

      Although I’m really pissed at whoever thought the wide straight parkway leading through the woods up to my workplace is 15 mph. That’s the reason people ignore speed limits

      However it is not set by anyone but me, never limits the vehicle, doesn’t make noise, and doesn’t get reported to anyone (as far as I know).

    • Jtee@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Governors aren’t anything new. It’s not taking control, rather just limiting speed.

      • middlemanSI@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        They wont be new when most people have used and adapted to them. Limiting speed is taking control. I can imagine situations when having the ability to speed up can save your life or avoid a crash (think overtaking, avoiding falling obstacles or percieved danger from other vehicles with distracted drivers). Theres’s a lot more about this then just limiting speed.

        • Addv4@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          Or it could just be a limiter on top speed. I know there are a few Chevrolets (like the volt) that limit top speed to around 90mph. I’d argue that’s pretty reasonable, as I don’t believe there is a public road where the speed limit is that high in the US. However, I do agree that the bigger issue is phone use and how no one seems to have a simple answer for fixing it (probably need a mandated mode which limits functions when the GPS detects you going over a certain speed, but which would require a large amount of industry cooperation which probably isn’t available).

          • otp@sh.itjust.works
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            12 days ago

            mandated mode which limits functions when the GPS detects you going over a certain speed

            Lol, this sounds like very American thinking. Yet y’all still make cars with 5 seats.

            Should we be locking functionality for people taking a bus or a train?

            Should we unlock the functionality again when they go ABOVE a certain speed? Because I’m pretty sure GPS works on planes, too.

            How about someone driving who wants to disable some annoying app that the kids in the back seat are using, and knowing that it’d get disabled as long as they go fast enough, speeds up the car beyond the speed limit?

            • Addv4@lemmy.world
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              12 days ago

              Again, it isn’t an easy solution, but the problem is insanely prevalent. I used to have a 30 min each way commute, and I’d say it was pretty safe to say at least 20% of the drivers I would drive alongside (mind you, above 65mph and generally in larger vehicles) were on their phones and pretty obviously distracted. It is very, very dangerous, and cops don’t really care to stop anyone doing it because its very hard to stop.

              Also, what do you mean by 5 seats? I don’t really get the reference.

              • otp@sh.itjust.works
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                12 days ago

                Also, what do you mean by 5 seats? I don’t really get the reference.

                It’s a reference to the fact that most cars have five seats.

                The driver’s seat, the front passenger’s seat, and then three more seats in the back.

                Your solution assumes that the only time a person’s phone would be moving as fast as a car would be if that person were driving. Yet there are 4 other seats in a car that could be reasonably occupied by people who each have phones that would be moving just as fast as the driver’s.

                • Addv4@lemmy.world
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                  12 days ago

                  While true, they aren’t a huge risk to others. I’ve driven nearish drunk drivers, stoned drivers, and plenty of people on their phones, and while the ones on their phones weren’t usually as bad as the drunk ones, they are ridiculously common and seem to be getting worse.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            12 days ago

            The loaner car I just got when bringing my vehicle in for some warranty service, was set by the dealer to max out at 85mph. Given that there’s no road above 65 in my state, that seems reasonable.

            Actually my car has parental controls that I’ve never considered using until now. I’m not going to nanny my teen drivers but surely they don’t need to exceed speed limit +20mph

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        If it limits your speed, it’s taking control of your speed, otherwise it’s not really limiting your speed.
        Basic logic 101.

        • Jtee@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          Governors don’t “take control”. You don’t get to 101mph and it goes oh better reduce his speed. It prevents you from getting there.

          Regardless, I re-read the article and it’s far more advanced than a governor. This article is indeed talking about something that takes control (uses technology to try and determine speed limits for example).

  • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    12 days ago

    My comment on US plans to make impaired driving detectors mandatory also applies to these speed limiters.. I admire the desire to make it safer, but holy shit are car manufacturers going to jump on this opportunity to sell out all of your driving data to insurance companies, causing your rates to randomly double and removing any semblance of privacy, and it will also involve additional parts and sensors that will be as closely corner cut as legally allowed such that it breaks as frequently as possible.

    a “safe” idea, sure, do I want it, absolutely not, and I will never trust a corporation to implement it ‘correctly’.

    • n3m37h@sh.itjust.works
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      12 days ago

      They already sell you all that data sorry to tell ya. Never allow your car to access your contact list unless ya want the manufacturer to sell that data off too

      • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 days ago

        Well, they don’t sell that from me, because I drive a car that’s 31 years old lmfao. No car built past 2014 has any kind of draw for me, specifically because of these kinds of privacy invasions and general corporate bullshittery.

        • humorlessrepost@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          GM stopped selling data to one of their many data customers, and their PR spun it like they stopped collecting and selling your data.

  • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    Is it a little beep or a constant alarm? I can’t imagine that many drivers would tolerate having a constant alarm.

    I’m in the USA and my impression here is that currently safety advocates are happy to set very low speed limits, drivers are happy to ignore those speed limits, and so everything works out. If speed limits were actually consistently enforced, I imagine there would be a lot of push-back against the politicians responsible.

    We need to breed a new generation of drivers who find driving in a more relaxed manner can be just as rewarding.

    I don’t see that happening.

    • bluGill@kbin.run
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      12 days ago

      Road engineers are happy to design streets to encourage higher speeds than is safe as well.

      • andrewta@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        Come to my town. If you obey the speed limit you hit almost every light on red. Do 5-10 mph over and you hit most on green.

        If you are at a red, the light will not change most times until there is a decent amount of traffic coming from another direction. When they get closer, they will get a red and you get a green. Making them stop.

        I want to meet the idiots who designed this system.

        • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          Sounds like it should be the exact opposite. In a road in a city near here they have leds installed in the streets and everything set for a green wave. If you drive in the green zone of the LEDs, you will have all lights green. It was a proof of concept and pretty cool imho.

          • bluGill@kbin.run
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            11 days ago

            Many cities try that. However it is very hard to pull that off when you have two way traffic, and busy cross streets make it worth. Two way traffic often means one direction has no cars, but the other does because the distance between lights is not something in control of the traffic engineers. And cross traffic means you need to handle the whole grid at once.

      • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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        11 days ago

        In the Netherlands we have traffic calming stuff everywhere. The result is that there is very little speeding going on. Distracted driving is another matter though…

    • Mac@mander.xyz
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      12 days ago

      there are many people who don’t want to drive, don’t care about the act of driving, and don’t respect the vehicle.
      it would help if these people weren’t forced to drive.

    • rimjob_rainer@discuss.tchncs.de
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      The speed limits are low because nobody respects them anyway. You could make actual meaningful speed limits if everyone would drive them.

      • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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        12 days ago

        I think people drive at speeds their comfortable with not some arbitrary number over any posted limit. In my state, they limit freeway speeds to 65MPH but I’ll usually do 75-80MPH in a big chain with all the other people commuting. Last time we were in Montana, the posted limit was 80MPH and I still only drove 75-80MPH because I feel comfortable at that speed.

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      Yeah in one of my previous cars you could set a speed above which the car would warn. I tried it and above the set speed the alarm would constantly sound. This was probably the initial implementation. The car also had an assist camera to avoid low speed collisions. So all the tech was already in the car… that was a Skoda from 2013.

    • renrenPDX@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Probably a constant ding sound. At least that’s how it used to be on some vehicles if you exceeded a certain speed in Japan.

  • adksilence
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    12 days ago

    I like how we collectively create nanny-states, then turn around and bitch when the cops have too much power. I hate how there really isn’t any good solution to many problems because of the human factor.

    • FarraigePlaisteach@lemmy.world
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      Hard to accuse the state of being a nanny when so many act like children. Being a child is fine, but not when driving a 2,000kg object at speed.

    • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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      I don’t see why nanny-state can’t be nanny about cops. You can both apply speed limiters and hold cops accountable for their actions.

  • Kekzkrieger@feddit.org
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    12 days ago

    My dad got something similar build into his car, its wrong so many times especially when road signs are confusing at construction sites.

    Example: Construction site limits speed to 60kmh and there is an exit coming up that goes through the actual construction site, that has a speed limit on the the exit of 30kmh, guess what. The car sees the 30kmh sign but doesnt understand its only for cars exiting but alarms the driver now until.the next 60kmh sign.

    So in order for this to work properly road signs have to be normalized all around the EU, which i don’t see happening anytime soon.

    • oKtosiTe@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      I didn’t see anywhere in the article how this will be implemented. Are we sure it uses sign recognition as opposed to GPS or some other method?

      • faercol@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        12 days ago

        My car uses a mix of GPS and camera, and I’m using Android Auto, which uses only GPS. There are several cases where both are wrong either

        • because the camera got confused by signs
        • the GPS data are not up to date

        So yeah that’s going to be fun… Like my car telling me I should drive a 30 limit instead of 110 on the highway (did happen several times)

    • Lemzlez@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Worse is the other way around, but if you then speed because the system doesn’t work, it’s of course still your own fault.

      I know why they want it and I mostly agree, but they’re massively downplaying the reliability concerns, saying it is “usually correct” (It’s not) and “data will improve”, conveniently ignoring that these underlying systems aren’t new and the data has consistently sucked over its entire lifetime. They don’t provide a target date by which they want this data to be available, so it will never be.

      Anecdotally, on a 30km drive, my car (which receives updates to nav data over cellular) is wrong 5-10 times, in both directions.

  • HelixDab2
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    12 days ago

    “Hard to argue against”

    No, it’s really quite easy to argue against them.

    I live in a rural area. If I call an ambulance, that’s a minimum–minimum–of 20 minutes for any ambulance to get to me. Then it’s another 20 minutes to get to an emergency room. I know someone who is a doctor that lives close to me, and their husband got stung by a bunch of yellow jackets. Their husband is allergic. They gave their husband a shit ton of meds, and made it to the ER in under 15 minutes. As it was, he barely avoided getting put on a ventilator, and that was with perfect care and driving 90+ mph on two lane mountain roads to get to a hospital. (He has an epinephrine pen now.) With a “smart” speed limiter on their car? He wouldn’t have been breathing by the time they got to the ER.

    When you live in a rural area, and emergency help is a long way away (honestly, 20 min ain’t that bad compared to other parts of the state where it can be more like 45+ minutes just to get an ambulance out), it’s really, really easy to argue against that kind of nanny state nonsense.

    • Furbag@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Presumably ambulances and other such emergency vehicles would be exempt from such devices? But I agree with you anyway since ambulances are expensive and having to choose between driving slow in your own car with a limiter and calling for an ambulance and going bankrupt should not be a choice someone has to make in a split second during an emergency.

        • Furbag@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          I am. It’s a real fuckin’ problemo. Ambulances are actually kinda rare to see these days because people around where I live call rideshares to take them to the hospital instead.

        • bluGill@kbin.run
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          12 days ago

          An Ambulance is expensive anywhere in the world. The only question is how do you hide the expensive. Most of the cost is having several vehicle with trained personal sitting around doing nothing just waiting for someone in need. If there is ever a time when there is one vehicle not ready to go but doing nothing you don’t have enough service for a potential worse disaster. Of course that means there is lots of room to hide the costs if you don’t want to tell the truth - which many do not.

          • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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            12 days ago

            When I took an ambulance, they charged me $1800 (after insurance) for a 10-minute ride to the hospital. That covers a lot of “sitting around” time for a group of people earning $15/hr. Just 10 calls in one day is close to $20k in revenue, or close to four months worth of pay for those two EMTs, and that ambulance is running 24/7.

      • bluGill@kbin.run
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        12 days ago

        An ambulance is a truck, and handles like one, they won’t be going as fast as a car on a two-lane mountain road - it isn’t possible to keep it on the road with perfect driving at speeds a small car can go. (an ambulance could be made smaller, but that is at the expensive of equipment they have inside so not a great compromise.)

      • HelixDab2
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        12 days ago

        Presumably ambulances and other such emergency vehicles would be exempt from such devices?

        Okay, but that misses the point.

        This doctor was driving at the speeds that an ambulance would have been driving, but only had to make the trip in one direction. It took them 20 minutes, from stings, to pulling into the ER (15 minutes of that being driving time). If they had called an ambulance, it would have been a minimum of 30-40 minutes, because the ambulance would have to get to them first.

        And again - 20 minutes for an ambulance to get to you is not all that bad, relative to even more rural areas, and counties that don’t even have a hospital or doctors.

        • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          But the ambulance carries epipens and would have administered one immediately.

          The drive to the hospital would have been precautionary and at a SAFE speed…

          • HelixDab2
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            12 days ago

            If–and this is a big “if” in very rural areas–the ambulance has someone on it that can legally administer drugs, and the ambulance isn’t on the other side of the county dealing with another medical emergency at the same time. (In my state, you need to be a paramedic to administer drugs; there are different classes of EMTs in my state, and most of them are not paramedics. There’s a severe shortage of paramedics, largely due to the god-awful pay, and so not all ambulances will have a paramedic on them at all times.)

            This was literally a best-case scenario: a doctor that had medications on-hand and could administer them, and able to get to the hospital faster than an ambulance could get to their home in the first place. And he still came very close to needing to be intubated.

            • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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              12 days ago

              Everyone can administer a epipen… And if you’re going to play “IF”…

              The ambulance could also have been two houses down and there in 3 minutes. Or the more likely IF, the driver of the car, could have wrecked injuring them and likely killing the patient, or even worse injured another car’s passengers…

              • HelixDab2
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                12 days ago

                The ambulance could also have been two houses down and there in 3 minutes.

                That’s significantly less likely than the ambulance being either at the hospital or being farther away than the hospital. Let’s say that 33% of the time the ambulance is at the hospital, 33% of the time it’s farther away, and 33% of the time it’s closer. That means that 66% of the time it’s going to take you less time to get to the hospital on your own than it would to wait for an ambulance.

                …And that’s only one specific type of medical emergency. What about uncontrolled bleeding? You want a real world example? Look at Kentucky Ballistics; he had a gun explode, and a piece of shrapnel went into his neck. If he had waited for an ambulance, he would have bled out before he made it to the hospital, and he was only about ten minutes away.

              • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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                12 days ago

                Great now explain how this works in every other type of medical emergency because for some reason only ambulances and EMTs are capable of driving fast safely.

            • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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              12 days ago

              And that’s just one example of a medical emergency. A simple Epi-pen isn’t going to save you when you’re having a stroke, heart attack, or bleeding internally.

        • Furbag@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          I 100% agree, I only brought up ambulances being exempt because you specifically mentioned them. I gather from your post that the value of ambulances in rural areas is probably less valuable than in urban areas simply because the main selling point of an ambulance is that it has right of way to overtake all traffic and ignore signals, but traffic is not the main issue, it’s long distances between hospitals or difficult terrain/winding roads that artificially limit speeds.

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          12 days ago

          In the very rural areas I would assume there to be ambulance/rescue helicopters, boats and snowmobiles etc that get dispatched. I was born and lived most of my life in a very rural area with the closest actual hospital with proper 24/7 er and more advanced surgery etc capabilities being some 160km away. Roads and road-bound vehicles just aren’t a thing you’d want to use or depend on in an emergency, if you live that rurally. So that’s really not a good argument to make, in my opinion, though maybe if you lived in the US, you wouldn’t have that and if you did, it’d bankrupt you if you made use of it, so you were going to be fucked either way. It’s dangerous to depend on rural roads if your only recourse is speeding. That’s just endangering everyone else too, be it only you as the driver the extra casualty. So the answer isn’t keeping the current dangerous system dangerous, rather maybe reconsider the way emergency response and general welfare and healthcare is organized and structured… if something like this would one day push you guys there, then I’d consider that only good. This is assuming you are from US of course. But I can’t really see any other country lacking basic services and needs like that, if internet and proficiency in English language as well as access to cars is taken as granted, which would mostly rule out third world countries since we are talking about rural areas.

          • HelixDab2
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            12 days ago

            rescue helicopters

            That, in particular, is especially fucked in the US. Life Flights/medevac helicopters are almost always private companies, and each insurance company has to negotiate with every medevac company separately. You can easily end up with a $100,000 bill from a helicopter ride to a trauma center because your insurer didn’t negotiate rates with the one company that was operating in your area, and you have no legal recourse aside from declaring bankruptcy.

            Should we have socialized or otherwise single-payer medicine in the US? Absolutely. But are we realistically going to do that before some id10t decides to legislate ‘smart’ cars that prevent you from exceeding what the car believes to be the speed limit? Nope. (For reference, I’ve driven a car with driver assist; it tried to jerk the wheel out of my hands a few times because it thought the road was turning when it wasn’t, because it was misreading the lines on the road and the signs.)

  • nifty@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    I wish regulations like this would help people realize that all along they were casual racing enthusiasts, and then spending time on the track for a few hours would become a weekend activity for many. Then we’d see an explosion of track cars vs grocery cars, and more tracks everywhere. That would be a positive outcome of something like this, per my pov.

    Perhaps this type of speeding regulation is also meant to help self driving cars? I am guessing that monitoring and predicting the variable speed of many other vehicles on the road is quite a task.

    • SpiderShoeCult@sopuli.xyz
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      12 days ago

      Yes, please. We need more Mazda MX-5s, less SUVs on the road and in terms of offers from car manufacturers. I know, technically not a track car, but you can still have lots of fun with it on the track without spending several peoples’ kidneys worth.

    • Chee_Koala@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Eh, yes please! I like your POV. Nothing wrong with wanting to drive fast, but racing in traffic is :). More tracks around would make it a lot more normal to go do your thing. Yeah, I see it :-)

      • nifty@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        For sure, I’d love to see more beautiful feats of engineering and aesthetics. Rally cars are also pretty awesome ❤️

          • nifty@lemmy.world
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            11 days ago

            I drive electric so I guess I forget 🤷‍♀️ Pollution is a fair point, though tbh all life activities create pollution. We can just minimize it.

            To me that just means there needs to be more focus towards making powerful and innovative electric track and rally cars. There are already some great candidates in the market

  • riodoro1@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    Tape over camera will somehow make it from laptop screens to car windshields. Or you can reflash the control units.

    • doggle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      11 days ago

      I suspect such circumvention will be illegal, and will turn a moderate speeding fine into a much more severe one.

  • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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    13 days ago

    I was wondering when this would finally become a thing. It makes a lot of sense.

    • nogooduser@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      It’s already a pretty common feature. My car has a speed limit sign reader and flashes a warning on the screen when you reach the speed limit.

      It also has a button to set the car’s speed limiter to the detected speed limit.

      It gets it wrong quite frequently though. Sometimes it misses signs and other times it picks up a sign on a side road that goes ahead where the road that you are on turns. I don’t know how it decides to handle national speed limit signs - sometimes it shows a national speed limit sign on the dash but other times it shows 60 or 70 instead.

      • nevemsenki@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        My car happily understands 10tonn signs as 10km/h limit, or pedestrian crossings as motorway (130km/h max). It also hss zero awareness if a speed limit is still relevant (eg have we passed an intersection since).

        I don’t have high trust in this tech currently.

      • seang96@spgrn.com
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        12 days ago

        I like the school zone ones where it shows 15 even though there is no flashing to indicate its 15. It’d need to be smarter to govern by this detection. Perhaps emitting a wireless signal even to make it harder to miss?

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    13 days ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Technology that will be required across Europe from this weekend may change that culture, because from 7 July all new cars sold in the EU and in Northern Ireland must have a range of technical safety features fitted as standard.

    The rest of the UK is theoretically free, as ministers once liked to put it, to make the most of its post-Brexit freedoms, but the integrated nature of car manufacturing means new vehicles here will also be telling their drivers to take their foot off the accelerator.

    Safety is the overriding reason for slower speeds, and as charities such as Brake and Rospa emphasise, even small increases above 30mph make a significant difference in outcomes, particularly for those who are not driving the car.

    Yousif Al-Ani, the principal engineer for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) at Thatcham Research, says: “Modern vehicles are very good at protecting occupants in the event of a collision through passive safety features, such as airbag and crumple zones, but these have limited benefit to vulnerable road users” such as pedestrians and cyclists.

    With the precise readings of computers replacing wobbly speedometer needles, however, and a new generation of speed cameras upping the ante on the enforcement side, it may be ever harder to disown responsibility.

    Questions remain over whether the technology works well enough in all real-life situations, and how comfortable people will feel with their car telling them what to do, let alone taking control of their steering, brakes and acceleration – a potentially alarming and disorienting experience.


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