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Pretty much spot on. They're going to have to resolve the "texting while driving" issue (or at least perfect the autonomous autos) before we get our flying cars.
Honestly people, catch up. Those who cannot attend to business in the car are spoiling it for those who can. People are simply not going to stop doing it.
We've banned all hand-held device use in cars in my state, and it does seem to have made a dent. I don't see so many idiots in parking lots yammering into their electronic pacifiers while making for the exit.
Still don't have one. Still don't want one.
Honestly people, catch up. Those who cannot attend to business in the car are spoiling it for those who can. People are simply not going to stop doing it.
Surely this is sarcasm? ...
I’ve heard and read that even when cell phone conversations are on hands-free gizmos, the drivers are still distracted such that they pose a risk on a par with drivers who have had a couple of beers. I’ve made no closer examination of those reports, and I hope they’re wrong, but I suspect they’re right.
Just a couple weeks ago the dewy-eyed bride and I took possession of a car eight years newer than the one it replaced. This new(er) car has a radio that launches missiles in Siberia. After a fortnight or so I am now only slightly addled by it. (It has “modes,” and that’s just the beginning of it.) Just this afternoon it trained me in “pairing” my iPhone. Now all I gotta do is push a button on the steering wheel and bark a command and bingo!, it does what I tell it. Another button on the steering wheel answers incoming calls and a button next to it “hangs up.”
Is this a thing of wonder? I sure would have thought so not all that many years ago. But if those studies alluded to above are indeed more right than wrong, then I have at my fingertips (literally) a pretty darned seductive distraction.
FWIW, I didn’t come upon this item independently. I haven’t dug through the Tacoma News-Tribune’s archives. It’s possible that the item is a clever hoax. It does seem almost *too* good.
I can verify that Mark R. Sullivan was president of Pacific Telephone & Telegraph, though.