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Date: 07 Oct 2007 15:02:17
From: Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS
Subject: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk Associated Press Article Launched: 10/02/2007 11:56:29 PM PDT BALTIMORE - Gas-electric hybrid vehicles, the status symbol for the environmentally conscientious, are coming under attack from a constituency that doesn't drive: the blind. Because hybrids make virtually no noise at slower speeds when they run solely on electric power, blind people say they pose a hazard to those who rely on their ears to determine whether it's safe to cross the street or walk through a parking lot. "I'm used to being able to get sound cues from my environment and negotiate accordingly. I hadn't imagined there was anything I really wouldn't be able to hear," said Deborah Kent Stein, chairwoman of the National Federation of the Blind's Committee on Automotive and Pedestrian Safety. "We did a test, and I discovered, to my great dismay, that I couldn't hear it." Officials with the Baltimore-based National Federation of the Blind are quick to point out that they're not advocating a return to gas guzzlers. They'd just like the fuel-efficient hybrids to make some noise. (snip) Blind people are not the only ones who've had close calls. Linda Murphy, 57, a personal administrative assistant from San Marcos, Calif., has 20/20 vision when she wears her glasses, but she's almost been hit twice by hybrids. "I'm walking right in back of it and it's moving and I didn't realize it until it nearly touched me," Murphy said, describing the first of her scares. "I never realized how dependent I was on my ears until I almost got hit."
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Date: 19 Oct 2007 23:03:14
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 15, 4:37 pm, Zoot Katz <zootk...@operamail.com > wrote: > I thought a major part of the plan was to facilitate the moving of > ICBMs around the country as a backup for the hardened silo strategy. You might be thinking of the "Midgetman" ICBMs developed in the 80s that were designed to be deployed to truck-mounted mobile launchers. The Interstate system design predates Midgetman by about three decades. RFM
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Date: 19 Oct 2007 17:13:52
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Fri, 19 Oct 2007 23:03:14 -0000, rmasoner@gmail.com wrote: >On Oct 15, 4:37 pm, Zoot Katz <zootk...@operamail.com> wrote: > >> I thought a major part of the plan was to facilitate the moving of >> ICBMs around the country as a backup for the hardened silo strategy. > >You might be thinking of the "Midgetman" ICBMs developed in the 80s >that were designed to be deployed to truck-mounted mobile launchers. >The Interstate system design predates Midgetman by about three >decades. > Since its inception in 1956, Interstate Highway lanes are the width they are and the overpasses are set at their height so that they enable passage of trucks carrying missiles. -- zk
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 17:34:14
From: Acquanera
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Fri, 19 Oct 2007 17:13:52 -0700, Zoot Katz <zootkatz@operamail.com > wrote: >On Fri, 19 Oct 2007 23:03:14 -0000, rmasoner@gmail.com wrote: > >>On Oct 15, 4:37 pm, Zoot Katz <zootk...@operamail.com> wrote: >> >>> I thought a major part of the plan was to facilitate the moving of >>> ICBMs around the country as a backup for the hardened silo strategy. >> >>You might be thinking of the "Midgetman" ICBMs developed in the 80s >>that were designed to be deployed to truck-mounted mobile launchers. >>The Interstate system design predates Midgetman by about three >>decades. >> >Since its inception in 1956, Interstate Highway lanes are the width >they are and the overpasses are set at their height so that they >enable passage of trucks carrying missiles. Yep - the width of the lanes, the strength of the foundation, the clearance of overpasses - Ike had the interstate system designed with the cold war in mind. One of the big bugaboos during WW-2 was the crappy road system. It made it difficult and slow to transport supplies and people from 'A' to 'B'. If you look at the maps, you'll see that MOST highways don't go across the country, but from city to city to city. They radiate outwards from every big city pretty much straight towards the next big city. Wagon routes. This meant that to get from NYC to LA you had to follow a very "wiggly" path with a big delay negotiating city traffic at every node along the route. The quality of the roads was usually crap too. So, Ike had a vision ...
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Date: 19 Oct 2007 22:53:31
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 10, 7:35 pm, websu...@cox.net wrote: Here was a cross- > country skier, in the woods in big game season, wearing two shades of > brown and no orange at all. That might have been me. I don't hunt elk and generally don't pay attention to when elk season is. I was hiking once through the woods in Colorado wearing subdued tones a few years ago and heard *BLAM* not far away. That's when I realized hunting season had opened. I also looked in my pack for something bright and colorful. RFM
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Date: 17 Oct 2007 20:51:15
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 14, 11:05 pm, r15...@aol.com wrote: > On Oct 10, 7:35 pm, websu...@cox.net wrote: > > > > > On Oct 7, 6:35 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: > > Just because you have the right of way does > > > > not mean that you're not an idiot. > > > Hmph. It's not limited to driving alone. Idiots are everywhere. > > > Some years ago I was elk hunting with a number of friends in the > > of Colorado. It was a very woodsy area. > > Each of us got a moment of excitement when we saw the brown legs > > walking through the forest. Yes, we were all wise enough to look for > > the rest of the critter. But not everyone is. Here was a cross- > > country skier, in the woods in big game season, wearing two shades of > > brown and no orange at all. > > > Oh, it would have been our fault for sure, and rightfully so. But > > there is something to be said for asking to be removed from the gene > > pool.... > > > (I know it's off-topic for driving, but idiots are generically > > distributed.) > > Shooting cross country skiers would be more sporting than shooting > elk. > > Robert Perhaps. But not as good eating.
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Date: 15 Oct 2007 06:23:20
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 10, 7:31 pm, Zoot Katz <zootk...@operamail.com > wrote: > On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 17:21:07 -0700, Larry Bud > > > > <larrybud2...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >If highways weren't built exclusively for motorists, what exactly is > >their other use? > > Primarily for the movement of goods and armies, silly. > > The Interstate highways are a cold war edifice. ... More accurately, a cold war artifice. It's true that Ike was impressed with the German highway system (after slogging across France), but really the idea that the US system would be necessary for mass evacuation in case of nuclear attack was a device to get average citizens to get on board. Nothing sells like fear. Ask Dick Ch@n#y about that. Obviously, if there is need for mass evacuation, the highways would be virtually useless. Which is proven every weekday at about 5 o'clock. Robert
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Date: 15 Oct 2007 16:37:13
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Mon, 15 Oct 2007 06:23:20 -0000, r15757@aol.com wrote: >On Oct 10, 7:31 pm, Zoot Katz <zootk...@operamail.com> wrote: >> On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 17:21:07 -0700, Larry Bud >> >> >> >> <larrybud2...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> >If highways weren't built exclusively for motorists, what exactly is >> >their other use? >> >> Primarily for the movement of goods and armies, silly. >> >> The Interstate highways are a cold war edifice. ... > >More accurately, a cold war artifice. > >It's true that Ike was impressed with the German highway system (after >slogging across France), but really the idea that the US system would >be necessary for mass evacuation in case of nuclear attack was a >device to get average citizens to get on board. Nothing sells like >fear. Ask Dick Ch@n#y about that. > >Obviously, if there is need for mass evacuation, the highways would be >virtually useless. Which is proven every weekday at about 5 o'clock. I thought a major part of the plan was to facilitate the moving of ICBMs around the country as a backup for the hardened silo strategy. Swiss highways are designed to take-off and land fighter jets discretely hangered in the adjacent picturesque barns. -- zk
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Date: 15 Oct 2007 06:05:28
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 10, 7:35 pm, websu...@cox.net wrote: > On Oct 7, 6:35 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: > Just because you have the right of way does > > > not mean that you're not an idiot. > > Hmph. It's not limited to driving alone. Idiots are everywhere. > > Some years ago I was elk hunting with a number of friends in the > of Colorado. It was a very woodsy area. > Each of us got a moment of excitement when we saw the brown legs > walking through the forest. Yes, we were all wise enough to look for > the rest of the critter. But not everyone is. Here was a cross- > country skier, in the woods in big game season, wearing two shades of > brown and no orange at all. > > Oh, it would have been our fault for sure, and rightfully so. But > there is something to be said for asking to be removed from the gene > pool.... > > (I know it's off-topic for driving, but idiots are generically > distributed.) Shooting cross country skiers would be more sporting than shooting elk. Robert
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Date: 17 Oct 2007 22:02:22
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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r15757@aol.com aka Robert ??? wrote: > On Oct 10, 7:35 pm, websu...@cox.net wrote: >> On Oct 7, 6:35 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: >> Just because you have the right of way does >> >>> not mean that you're not an idiot. >> Hmph. It's not limited to driving alone. Idiots are everywhere. >> >> Some years ago I was elk hunting with a number of friends in the >> of Colorado. It was a very woodsy area. >> Each of us got a moment of excitement when we saw the brown legs >> walking through the forest. Yes, we were all wise enough to look for >> the rest of the critter. But not everyone is. Here was a cross- >> country skier, in the woods in big game season, wearing two shades of >> brown and no orange at all. >> >> Oh, it would have been our fault for sure, and rightfully so. But >> there is something to be said for asking to be removed from the gene >> pool.... >> >> (I know it's off-topic for driving, but idiots are generically >> distributed.) > > Shooting cross country skiers would be more sporting than shooting > elk. Is there a season for downhill skiers? -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia Beer - It's not just for breakfast anymore!
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 17:32:20
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 14, 9:51 am, Tom Sherman <sunsetss0...@yahoo.com > wrote: > frkry...@gmail.com aka Frank Krygowski wrote: > > > ... > > Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within > > limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else.... > > That is an impossible standard for a motor vehicle operator to meet. > Furthermore, it is also an impossible standard for a cyclist or pedestrian. > > Since you are an engineer, look up the LRFD method. Notice that the > probability of failure can never be reduced to zero, no matter how high > the resistance factors. I suppose, then, that the word "guarantee" needs to be removed from the English language. Right? I think you should make that your personal project. Get going, man! There's work to be done! - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 17 Oct 2007 22:01:25
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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frkrygow@gmail.com aka Frank Krygowski wrote: > On Oct 14, 9:51 am, Tom Sherman <sunsetss0...@yahoo.com> wrote: >> frkry...@gmail.com aka Frank Krygowski wrote: >> >>> ... >>> Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within >>> limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else.... >> That is an impossible standard for a motor vehicle operator to meet. >> Furthermore, it is also an impossible standard for a cyclist or pedestrian. >> >> Since you are an engineer, look up the LRFD method. Notice that the >> probability of failure can never be reduced to zero, no matter how high >> the resistance factors. > > I suppose, then, that the word "guarantee" needs to be removed from > the English language. Right? > > I think you should make that your personal project. > > Get going, man! There's work to be done! Even do any consulting on the side? Ever consider loss prevention and liability? If so, you would not use the word guarantee in such a cavalier manner. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia Beer - It's not just for breakfast anymore!
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 17:29:20
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 14, 9:58 am, Tom Sherman <sunsetss0...@yahoo.com > wrote: > frkry...@gmail.com aka Frank Krygowski wrote: > > > On Oct 9, 4:45 pm, N8N <njna...@hotmail.com> wrote: > >> On Oct 8, 7:53 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > >>> My driving is careful enough that I _can_ guarantee I won't hit a > >>> pedestrian or cyclist. > >> No, you can't. > > > How many years of proof do you require? Not only have I never hit a > > pedestrian or cyclist, but I've never come nearly as close as you > > have.... > > For the use of the word "guarantee", driving an infinite number of years > without incident would suffice. Hmm. And silly me, I thought I'd have to avoid hitting cyclists and pedestrians only until I died. That was my plan. But if you like, I can extend my strategy for the next infinity of reincarnations. No problem. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 08:22:11
From: N8N
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 10, 2:30 pm, Studemania <midl...@earthlink.net > wrote: > On Oct 9, 3:46 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: > > > > > > > zeldabee wrote: > > > Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: > > > >>DYM wrote: > > > >>>Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@hotmail.com> wrote in > > >>>news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: > > > >>>>Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > > > >>>>>Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > > > >>>>I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. > > > >>>>Think of the customising potential. > > > >>>Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound > > >>>just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! > > > > Oh! I want my bike to sound like a choo-choo train! > > > >>It already exists: > > > >>http://www.vroombox.com/vroombox/ > > > >>I'm ashamed that I know this. > > > >>nate > > > >>(making noise the old fashioned way) > > > > Rats, it's expensive. I'd like to get one for my four-year-old. Come to > > > think of it, he's *very* good at making car noises. If I ever get a Prius, > > > I could drive with the window down, and have him do his thing. [Random > > > cuteness: The other night, he was in a cardboard box "driving." Vrooom > > > vrooom, etc. Then silence. I look over at him and he sighs and says, > > > "Traffic."] > > > > Back on topic, though, a friend has a Prius, and complains about how quiet > > > it is. She's always startling people when she drives on side streets. > > > Do what I did, get an old Studebaker, drop a 10.25:1 compression 289 in > > it, and when ordering a new exhaust from Don Simmons, ask for the "loud > > tone" mufflers :) ("Studemania" can probably attest to how sweet that > > combo sounds, although he's never heard my particular car run.) If your > > four year old is anything like I was at that age he'll have a stupid, > > silly grin on his face every time you nail it (well, so will you for > > that matter.) > > > Of course, gas mileage may suffer a little bit relative to a Prius... > > > nate > > > -- > > replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.http://members.cox.net/njnagel-Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text - > > I'm gotta get you a copy of the BBC Video (I was slight involved with) > and the mellow sound of the Avanti. > I've brought it to IMs, but there hasn't been a VCR to play it. > > Like with most "loud" systems, it'sloud when you want it to be. Funny you should mention an Avanti; JP had an Avanti with the factory optional "quiet tone" exhaust with the crossover pipe but he installed glasspacks as no mufflers came with the car; that was probably the quietest, most civlized Avanti I'd ever driven. Under heavy acceleration you could actually hear the intake noise (it was an R1) much louder than the exhaust, with only a little hint of rumble. It was an older guy that came to look at the car (and ended up buying it) - he loved the car but said that his first order of business was to "fix the exhaust" because it was "just too loud." I can't imagine what he would have thought if it had had the standard exhaust on it... (for non-Stude types, the factory Avanti exhaust was a true dual with no crossover and a single glasspack on each pipe.) nate
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 19:35:11
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 6:35 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net > wrote: Just because you have the right of way does > not mean that you're not an idiot. Hmph. It's not limited to driving alone. Idiots are everywhere. Some years ago I was elk hunting with a number of friends in the mountains of Colorado. It was a very woodsy area. Each of us got a moment of excitement when we saw the brown legs walking through the forest. Yes, we were all wise enough to look for the rest of the critter. But not everyone is. Here was a cross- country skier, in the woods in big game season, wearing two shades of brown and no orange at all. Oh, it would have been our fault for sure, and rightfully so. But there is something to be said for asking to be removed from the gene pool.... (I know it's off-topic for driving, but idiots are generically distributed.)
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 19:16:20
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 10, 8:21 pm, Larry Bud <larrybud2...@yahoo.com > wrote: > On Oct 7, 10:03 pm, Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS > > <beta...@earthlink.net> wrote: > > On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > > - Frank Krygowski > > > Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both > > drivers and peds. > > If highways weren't built exclusively for motorists, what exactly is > their other use? Perhaps you've confused nouns. I said "the world," not "highways." Nonetheless, highways - whatever exact definition you choose for that word - were _not_ built exclusively for motorists. Most predate motor vehicles, so they were clearly built with other transportation in mind. And all but a few allow pedestrians, bicyclists, and horse- drawn vehicles. Even many freeways allow bicyclists. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 17:21:07
From: Larry Bud
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 10:03 pm, Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS <beta...@earthlink.net > wrote: > On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > - Frank Krygowski > > Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both > drivers and peds. If highways weren't built exclusively for motorists, what exactly is their other use?
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 19:31:26
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 17:21:07 -0700, Larry Bud <larrybud2002@yahoo.com > wrote: >On Oct 7, 10:03 pm, Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS ><beta...@earthlink.net> wrote: >> On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: >> >> >> >> > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're >> > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. >> >> > - Frank Krygowski >> >> Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both >> drivers and peds. > >If highways weren't built exclusively for motorists, what exactly is >their other use? Primarily for the movement of goods and armies, silly. The Interstate highways are a cold war edifice. The roads, streets and highways used by bicyclists and pedestrians pre-date that by centuries. Automobilists are interlopers on any road not built for their exclusive use. Toll roads and some others prohibit non-motorised traffic but bicyclists, equestrians and pedestrians are free to travel most roads where you're likely to encounter them. Now the scud-enslaved sprawl dwellers get their consumerist whims catered too by the same capitalists as tell them what to dream. Happy Motoring is finished. You're going to have to adapt and I ain't talking bio-fuels. Your plushy carapace is really an albatross, sucker. As it currently stands, your driving ends up costing non-drivers $2.10 for every dollar you spend on your habitual, inefficient and unsustainable transportation choice. We're getting sick of it. It's time you started paying your way. I pay for your permanently brain damaged kids on life support after you've tossed 'em around inside your rolling coffin. I pay for the cops to bust you for the increased damage that you cause by your excessive speeds, inattention or hostile and dangerous hissy fits. I pay for the worldwide epidemic you inflict on us with your programmed pursuit of a packaged plastic American dream you feel you deserve. Then I have to listen to your obnoxiously puerile car alarms at all hours when I personally care less than nought whether your precious widdle car is vandalised into scrap before my eyes. Hollwood, Madison Avenue, GMAC and NASCAR own your imagination, slag. -- zk
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 22:06:55
From: Mike Kruger
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Zoot Katz wrote: > On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 17:21:07 -0700, Larry Bud >> >> If highways weren't built exclusively for motorists, what exactly is >> their other use? > > Primarily for the movement of goods and armies, silly. > > The Interstate highways are a cold war edifice. Yep. Ike was a general, and that's how he was convinced to go along with the program. There are even more uses that are less intentional than the ones Zoot listed. http://www.nature.com/news/2007/071011/full/news.2007.155.html Moose use roads as a defence against bears. (This is actually a pretty cool story. Sure, I posted it as a bit of a joke -- but it helps make the point that societal structures are multi-use structures in ways we often don't think of.)
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 12:29:07
From: Studemania
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 9, 8:37 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 9, 4:45 pm, N8N <njna...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > On Oct 8, 7:53 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > My driving is careful enough that I _can_ guarantee I won't hit a > > > pedestrian or cyclist. > > > No, you can't. > > How many years of proof do you require? Not only have I never hit a > pedestrian or cyclist, but I've never come nearly as close as you > have. > > > There's a better idiot built every day,... > > ... and given a driver's license... > > > no matter how > > careful a driver you are. Someone could wait between two parked cars > > and step out in front of you too close for you to even think about > > stopping; you would be unable to avoid hitting them. > > Like most auto-erotics, you seem completely unable to envision driving > in a way that would enable evasion! > > Look, I'll spell it out for you. First, you don't drive so close to > parked cars that someone can "step out" in front of you. You drive > several steps further left. > > Is that impossible for some reason? It could happen - say, in a park > where cars are parked along a narrow drive for some special event. > Then you use some _really_ sophisticated tactics: You slow WAY down > and drive on high alert. > > I had those tactics pay off once in that very situation. A little > girl rode her bike out from between two cars and headed right for me, > riding on the wrong side of the road. But I avoided her easily. > > It sounds like you would have first hit her, then called her an > obscene name. > > > As far fetched > > as that sounds, it actually happens quite often, because people are > > idiots. > > ... And because they grand drivers licenses to those same idiots, > based on almost no training, or skills, or maturity of judgment. > > > > The current situation with most drivers (especially driving > > > "enthusiasts") is, they expect people to stay out of their way and > > > never delay them. When people don't, they get enraged. When they > > > damage something or injure someone, they make excuses. As Nate did. > > > No, I didn't make excuses. You're just a bitter old fuckwit ... > > I love it when someone descends into obscene insults. It nicely > displays the limits of their intellect. > > But you _did_ make excuses. You almost hit a pedestrian, and you > blamed him for being the wrong race and wearing the wrong clothes. > Not one iota of responsibility on your part, eh? > > > I believe that if people act like idiots, they shouldn't blame others > > for near-misses caused by their own negligence and idiocy. > > ?? And yet, you had a near miss, and you're blaming others for your > idiocy! Talk about lacking a sense of responsibility! Sheesh! > > > So are we supposed to have lights on the sides of our cars now to > > illuminate the sidewalks? > > My impression was that the pedestrian you almost hit was in a > crosswalk. You did say the event happened when you turned left, and > that he was crossing the street while walking the same direction you > had been heading. > > I don't want your lights to illuminate the sidewalk. I trust even you > have the minimal skills required to keep your car off the sidewalk. > > Now if we can teach you the minimum skill of NOT overdriving your > headlights - even while turning - we'll have something. > > > > Why is this too complicated for some people? > > > Because some people are idiots... > > Well, that does explain it, I suppose. Perhaps the next question is, > how can we prevent idiots from acquiring drivers licenses? > > > I see that you haven't > > learned a damned thing since the last time you insinuated yourself > > into RAD, and that you're still as virulently anti-motorist as ever. > > Sorry, Nate. I'm not virulently anti-motorist. I am a motorist and > have been for a long, long time. All my friends are motorists. > > But I am virulently against immature and incompetent driver, > especially those who whine excuses, and try to shift responsibility > for their mistakes onto others. > > FWIW, I have little sympathy for pedestrians, bicyclists or > motorcyclists who _do_ make illegal moves that get themselves hurt. > But I have absolutely NO sympathy for people whose incompetence hurts > - or nearly hurts - others, then whine that the others should have > behaved differently. > > Oh, and I have no respect for people who can't debate an issue without > descending into obscenity. So, little boy, you lose my respect on all > counts. > > - Frank Krygowski I was in my mid-sixties becore I hit one. A van was parked with front bumper at the near line of the crosswalk. I crept forward, slancing left for stop-sign jumpers and the car and walker met. (He walked into me, actually, but i felt at fault.)
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 11:30:24
From: Studemania
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 9, 3:46 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net > wrote: > zeldabee wrote: > > Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: > > >>DYM wrote: > > >>>Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@hotmail.com> wrote in > >>>news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: > > >>>>Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > > >>>>>Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > > >>>>I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. > > >>>>Think of the customising potential. > > >>>Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound > >>>just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! > > > Oh! I want my bike to sound like a choo-choo train! > > >>It already exists: > > >>http://www.vroombox.com/vroombox/ > > >>I'm ashamed that I know this. > > >>nate > > >>(making noise the old fashioned way) > > > Rats, it's expensive. I'd like to get one for my four-year-old. Come to > > think of it, he's *very* good at making car noises. If I ever get a Prius, > > I could drive with the window down, and have him do his thing. [Random > > cuteness: The other night, he was in a cardboard box "driving." Vrooom > > vrooom, etc. Then silence. I look over at him and he sighs and says, > > "Traffic."] > > > Back on topic, though, a friend has a Prius, and complains about how quiet > > it is. She's always startling people when she drives on side streets. > > Do what I did, get an old Studebaker, drop a 10.25:1 compression 289 in > it, and when ordering a new exhaust from Don Simmons, ask for the "loud > tone" mufflers :) ("Studemania" can probably attest to how sweet that > combo sounds, although he's never heard my particular car run.) If your > four year old is anything like I was at that age he'll have a stupid, > silly grin on his face every time you nail it (well, so will you for > that matter.) > > Of course, gas mileage may suffer a little bit relative to a Prius... > > nate > > -- > replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.http://members.cox.net/njnagel- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - I'm gotta get you a copy of the BBC Video (I was slight involved with) and the mellow sound of the Avanti. I've brought it to IMs, but there hasn't been a VCR to play it. Like with most "loud" systems, it'sloud when you want it to be.
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 03:37:54
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 9, 4:45 pm, N8N <njna...@hotmail.com > wrote: > On Oct 8, 7:53 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > My driving is careful enough that I _can_ guarantee I won't hit a > > pedestrian or cyclist. > > No, you can't. How many years of proof do you require? Not only have I never hit a pedestrian or cyclist, but I've never come nearly as close as you have. > There's a better idiot built every day,... ... and given a driver's license... > no matter how > careful a driver you are. Someone could wait between two parked cars > and step out in front of you too close for you to even think about > stopping; you would be unable to avoid hitting them. Like most auto-erotics, you seem completely unable to envision driving in a way that would enable evasion! Look, I'll spell it out for you. First, you don't drive so close to parked cars that someone can "step out" in front of you. You drive several steps further left. Is that impossible for some reason? It could happen - say, in a park where cars are parked along a narrow drive for some special event. Then you use some _really_ sophisticated tactics: You slow WAY down and drive on high alert. I had those tactics pay off once in that very situation. A little girl rode her bike out from between two cars and headed right for me, riding on the wrong side of the road. But I avoided her easily. It sounds like you would have first hit her, then called her an obscene name. > As far fetched > as that sounds, it actually happens quite often, because people are > idiots. ... And because they grand drivers licenses to those same idiots, based on almost no training, or skills, or maturity of judgment. > > The current situation with most drivers (especially driving > > "enthusiasts") is, they expect people to stay out of their way and > > never delay them. When people don't, they get enraged. When they > > damage something or injure someone, they make excuses. As Nate did. > > No, I didn't make excuses. You're just a bitter old fuckwit ... I love it when someone descends into obscene insults. It nicely displays the limits of their intellect. But you _did_ make excuses. You almost hit a pedestrian, and you blamed him for being the wrong race and wearing the wrong clothes. Not one iota of responsibility on your part, eh? > I believe that if people act like idiots, they shouldn't blame others > for near-misses caused by their own negligence and idiocy. ?? And yet, you had a near miss, and you're blaming others for your idiocy! Talk about lacking a sense of responsibility! Sheesh! > So are we supposed to have lights on the sides of our cars now to > illuminate the sidewalks? My impression was that the pedestrian you almost hit was in a crosswalk. You did say the event happened when you turned left, and that he was crossing the street while walking the same direction you had been heading. I don't want your lights to illuminate the sidewalk. I trust even you have the minimal skills required to keep your car off the sidewalk. Now if we can teach you the minimum skill of NOT overdriving your headlights - even while turning - we'll have something. > > Why is this too complicated for some people? > > Because some people are idiots... Well, that does explain it, I suppose. Perhaps the next question is, how can we prevent idiots from acquiring drivers licenses? > I see that you haven't > learned a damned thing since the last time you insinuated yourself > into RAD, and that you're still as virulently anti-motorist as ever. Sorry, Nate. I'm not virulently anti-motorist. I am a motorist and have been for a long, long time. All my friends are motorists. But I am virulently against immature and incompetent driver, especially those who whine excuses, and try to shift responsibility for their mistakes onto others. FWIW, I have little sympathy for pedestrians, bicyclists or motorcyclists who _do_ make illegal moves that get themselves hurt. But I have absolutely NO sympathy for people whose incompetence hurts - or nearly hurts - others, then whine that the others should have behaved differently. Oh, and I have no respect for people who can't debate an issue without descending into obscenity. So, little boy, you lose my respect on all counts. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 08:58:52
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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frkrygow@gmail.com aka Frank Krygowski wrote: > On Oct 9, 4:45 pm, N8N <njna...@hotmail.com> wrote: >> On Oct 8, 7:53 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: >> >>> My driving is careful enough that I _can_ guarantee I won't hit a >>> pedestrian or cyclist. >> No, you can't. > > How many years of proof do you require? Not only have I never hit a > pedestrian or cyclist, but I've never come nearly as close as you > have.... For the use of the word "guarantee", driving an infinite number of years without incident would suffice. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia Beer - It's not just for breakfast anymore!
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 03:08:22
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 9, 4:06 pm, Studemania <midl...@earthlink.net > wrote: > On Oct 9, 10:54 am, AustinMN <tacooper...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > I'd like to know how those "crash safety ratings" take pedestrian > > injury into account. > > > Austin > > I expect that the NHSTA could give you more information than you would > care to read. > Take a look at my 40 year old car and at my GF year old one. Those > flowing lines and lack of "things sticking out" were not brought about > merely for fuel economy. Yet they still sell atrocities like this: http://tinyurl.com/2epe46 Some people don't care if they slice up pedestrians, so long as their pretty truck isn't scratched. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 16:04:44
From: N8N
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 9, 10:07 am, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 8, 11:59 pm, <j...@phred.org> wrote: > > > > > A friend of the family was driving one night in the rain and heard a > > thump. Turned out her rear-view mirror had smacked a teenager in the > > back of his head -- yes, he was black, and yes, he was wearing dark > > clothes, and yes, he was riding at night with nothing more than dirty, > > misaligned CPSC reflectors. > > > She said she honestly didn't see him before she hit him, and everyone > > believed her. That didn't mean she wasn't liable, it meant she was > > driving negligently but not criminally. > > And it's very likely that she didn't see him. > > But why? In these forums, we've heard of drivers that "didn't see" > cyclists because they were driving while turned around reaching for > cassette tapes in the back seat. We know about drivers talking, or > dialing, or even texting on their cell phones while driving. I've > seen drivers reading newspapers while moving at highway speeds... and > so on. > > The motoring culture has the view that driving a car is no more > complicated than watching TV, and that OF COURSE one can do three > other distracting things while driving - and while trying to minimize > travel time by going as fast as minimal law enforcement will allow. > > It's a rare driver that uses caution appropriate for operating deadly > machinery. And consequently, our legal system doesn't treat gross > negligence as criminal. > > A motorist who hits a legal cyclists because she "didn't see" him, has > admitted to gross negligence. She should get no sympathy. In fact, > she should lose her license. > > - Frank Krygowski In my experience the "legal cyclist" is even rarer than a "legal motorist" (implying strict compliance with all rules of the road.) I can't remember the last time I saw a cyclist even slow down for a stop sign, and that's just one example. A cyclist riding at night without any kind of lights is an idiot plain and simple. It's only a matter of time until another cyclist gets hit around here (was about a month ago that I saw the aftermath of an ugly car-cycle interface in the middle of an intersection) and honestly, it is difficult to feel anything but sympathy for the motorists. The way the cyclists ride displays the same kind of arrogance and "make way for me lowly cars, I'm a CYCLIST" attitude that I see frequently displayed on Usenet. Nobody OWNS the road, we simply SHARE it. That means everyone has to play by the rules. Yes, including cyclists. nate
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Date: 10 Oct 2007 00:02:43
From: Mike Kruger
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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N8N wrote: > > In my experience the "legal cyclist" is even rarer than a "legal > motorist" (implying strict compliance with all rules of the road.) > Is a three headed dog more rare than a three headed cat? > Nobody OWNS the road, we simply SHARE it. That means everyone has to > play by the rules. Yes, including cyclists. Amen.
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 17:45:45
From: Bill Sornson
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Mike Kruger wrote: > N8N wrote: >> >> In my experience the "legal cyclist" is even rarer than a "legal >> motorist" (implying strict compliance with all rules of the road.) > Is a three headed dog more rare than a three headed cat? You channeling Michael Press*?!? *the recent funny version, that is
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 13:45:51
From: N8N
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 8, 7:53 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 8, 1:02 pm, AustinMN <tacooper...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > On Oct 8, 8:44 am, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within > > > limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else. > > > The only way to GUARANTEE you won't harm anyone else is to not operate > > the machinery at all. There is absolutely no other way. Having 5 > > sets of eyes in the car won't do it. Only travelling at 5 mph won't > > do it. The only thing that can possibly accomplish your standard is > > to never operate. Period. > > > That is why it is so difficult for people to believe you when you > > claim you are not totally anti-car. > > If you want to take your idea to a ridiculously extreme, I suppose you > might claim that even _owning_ a machine might harm someone else. > Why, what if your car were parked in your drive ever since it was > delivered (by a different driver, of course) and the emergency brake > cable and transmission pawl rusted through? Why, it might coast down > your drive and run someone over! > > But a reasonable person should see a difference between a ridiculous > extreme, on the one hand, and driving carefully enough that you don't > almost hit a pedestrian, as Nate did. "almost" counts in what again? > > My driving is careful enough that I _can_ guarantee I won't hit a > pedestrian or cyclist. No, you can't. There's a better idiot built every day, no matter how careful a driver you are. Someone could wait between two parked cars and step out in front of you too close for you to even think about stopping; you would be unable to avoid hitting them. As far fetched as that sounds, it actually happens quite often, because people are idiots. > And as with most good guarantees, if my > promise should somehow fail, I'll make it up, certainly financially, > and possibly by ceding my driver's license. > > The current situation with most drivers (especially driving > "enthusiasts") is, they expect people to stay out of their way and > never delay them. When people don't, they get enraged. When they > damage something or injure someone, they make excuses. As Nate did. No, I didn't make excuses. You're just a bitter old fuckwit that likes to attack anyone with a car, no matter how idiotic the other individual involved is, or how little harm was done (in this case, none.) I was just relating an anecdote to illustrate how irresponsible and unconcerned with their own safety some pedestrians are, and you have to twist it around to fit your agenda. I don't see that I have to make excuses for anything, because NOTHING HAPPENED (other than some idiot thought that my car was too close to him, due to his own lack of responsibility for his own safety.) Now had my speed been such that I was actually overdriving my visibility and had actually hit him, then you might have a point. But as it is, you don't. > > They somehow believe that people have no right to the most fundamental > form of human locomotion, whenever the walker's path crosses their > own. I think that's incredibly selfish. I believe that if people act like idiots, they shouldn't blame others for near-misses caused by their own negligence and idiocy. > > > I learned a long time ago that one should not rely on a single point > > of failure. Wearing dark clothing at night in traffic is doing > > exactly that. Wearing light colored clothing does not shift > > responsibility from the driver; it only reduces the danger from that > > single point of failure (the driver). That danger always exists, not > > matter how much care is taken, no matter how much speed is reduced, > > etc. > > And I think it's a good idea to be visible when walking at night. In > fact, when I do walk at night, I normally carry a small light. BUT > there should be no expectation on the part of a driver that all > pedestrians will do this! So are we supposed to have lights on the sides of our cars now to illuminate the sidewalks? I was unaware of this new requirement. I'll have to write to NHTSA and get the appropriate guidelines so that I may retrofit legally compliant lights to my obviously outdated vehicle. > > A driver should always drive within the limits of his visibility. And > since pedestrians have no legal requirement to carry lights or dress > to a motorist's preference, motorists _should_ drive in such a way > that they won't run over any person of any race dressed in any color > he may choose. And indeed I did not. However, a pedestrian thought that I was too close to him for his comfort, due solely to his poor choice of clothing for walking after dark. > > Why is this too complicated for some people? Because some people are idiots, like yourself. I see that you haven't learned a damned thing since the last time you insinuated yourself into RAD, and that you're still as virulently anti-motorist as ever. Here's a free clue for you; some of us don't necessarily WANT to be motorists as often as we are; my job requires me to drive therefore I either drive or find another job. You don't hear me badmouthing cyclists because I don't bike that often (unless they are actually doing something illegal or stupid.) So you can take your attitude and shove it up your rosy red rectum. nate
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 13:06:46
From: Studemania
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 9, 10:54 am, AustinMN <tacooper...@hotmail.com > wrote: > I'd like to know how those "crash safety ratings" take pedestrian > injury into account. > > Austin I expect that the NHSTA could give you more information than you would care to read. Take a look at my 40 year old car and at my GF year old one. Those flowing lines and lack of "things sticking out" were not brought about merely for fuel economy.
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 10:54:15
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 9:03 pm, Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS <beta...@earthlink.net > wrote: > On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > - Frank Krygowski > > Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both > drivers and peds. But the auto industry, which makes a fortune off car > crashes, pays the media to glamorize speeding and the idiot american > goes along with the brainwashing like they always do. My favorite is "crash safety ratings." Now that is an oxymoron if I ever heard one. Not crashing is always safer for everybody involved than the "safest" car in a crash. I'd like to know how those "crash safety ratings" take pedestrian injury into account. Austin
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 14:07:06
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 8, 11:59 pm, <j...@phred.org > wrote: > > A friend of the family was driving one night in the rain and heard a > thump. Turned out her rear-view mirror had smacked a teenager in the > back of his head -- yes, he was black, and yes, he was wearing dark > clothes, and yes, he was riding at night with nothing more than dirty, > misaligned CPSC reflectors. > > She said she honestly didn't see him before she hit him, and everyone > believed her. That didn't mean she wasn't liable, it meant she was > driving negligently but not criminally. And it's very likely that she didn't see him. But why? In these forums, we've heard of drivers that "didn't see" cyclists because they were driving while turned around reaching for cassette tapes in the back seat. We know about drivers talking, or dialing, or even texting on their cell phones while driving. I've seen drivers reading newspapers while moving at highway speeds... and so on. The motoring culture has the view that driving a car is no more complicated than watching TV, and that OF COURSE one can do three other distracting things while driving - and while trying to minimize travel time by going as fast as minimal law enforcement will allow. It's a rare driver that uses caution appropriate for operating deadly machinery. And consequently, our legal system doesn't treat gross negligence as criminal. A motorist who hits a legal cyclists because she "didn't see" him, has admitted to gross negligence. She should get no sympathy. In fact, she should lose her license. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 20:37:14
From: Studemania
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 7:03 pm, Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS <beta...@earthlink.net > wrote: > On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > - Frank Krygowski > > Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both > drivers and peds. But the auto industry, which makes a fortune off car > crashes, pays the media to glamorize speeding and the idiot american > goes along with the brainwashing like they always do. How did we get from people crossing city streets to Highways? Another point, a group of Coventry City Council cars were replaced with electric or hybred cars about five years ago. It seems that they might have recoprds. Conversely, the CCC head was interviewed on Doolan show ten years ago and he suggested that ideas om a certain subject be sent to him. When asked it, it seems that he didn't even know his postal code at the Council House! They didn't supply addressed envelope for me to pay my council taxes nor even consider the idea of imcluding a gummed label. Thereafter, when I sent in my cheque, I included a bunch of funny newspaper clippings and other such time-wasters. The 'girls' probabnly enjoyed them, but......
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 16:53:26
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 8, 1:02 pm, AustinMN <tacooper...@hotmail.com > wrote: > On Oct 8, 8:44 am, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within > > limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else. > > The only way to GUARANTEE you won't harm anyone else is to not operate > the machinery at all. There is absolutely no other way. Having 5 > sets of eyes in the car won't do it. Only travelling at 5 mph won't > do it. The only thing that can possibly accomplish your standard is > to never operate. Period. > > That is why it is so difficult for people to believe you when you > claim you are not totally anti-car. If you want to take your idea to a ridiculously extreme, I suppose you might claim that even _owning_ a machine might harm someone else. Why, what if your car were parked in your drive ever since it was delivered (by a different driver, of course) and the emergency brake cable and transmission pawl rusted through? Why, it might coast down your drive and run someone over! But a reasonable person should see a difference between a ridiculous extreme, on the one hand, and driving carefully enough that you don't almost hit a pedestrian, as Nate did. My driving is careful enough that I _can_ guarantee I won't hit a pedestrian or cyclist. And as with most good guarantees, if my promise should somehow fail, I'll make it up, certainly financially, and possibly by ceding my driver's license. The current situation with most drivers (especially driving "enthusiasts") is, they expect people to stay out of their way and never delay them. When people don't, they get enraged. When they damage something or injure someone, they make excuses. As Nate did. They somehow believe that people have no right to the most fundamental form of human locomotion, whenever the walker's path crosses their own. I think that's incredibly selfish. > I learned a long time ago that one should not rely on a single point > of failure. Wearing dark clothing at night in traffic is doing > exactly that. Wearing light colored clothing does not shift > responsibility from the driver; it only reduces the danger from that > single point of failure (the driver). That danger always exists, not > matter how much care is taken, no matter how much speed is reduced, > etc. And I think it's a good idea to be visible when walking at night. In fact, when I do walk at night, I normally carry a small light. BUT there should be no expectation on the part of a driver that all pedestrians will do this! A driver should always drive within the limits of his visibility. And since pedestrians have no legal requirement to carry lights or dress to a motorist's preference, motorists _should_ drive in such a way that they won't run over any person of any race dressed in any color he may choose. Why is this too complicated for some people? - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 15:51:24
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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In article <1191848777.223700.130270@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, N8N <njnagel@hotmail.com > writes: > On Oct 7, 9:42 pm, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> In article <fec1ge01...@news2.newsguy.com>, >> Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> writes: >> >> >> >> >> >> > frkry...@gmail.com wrote: >> >> On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: >> >> >>>Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly >> >>>impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the >> >>>law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is >> >>>backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a >> >>>lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing >> >>>no-less!) pedestrian! >> >> >> Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're >> >> going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. >> >> >> - Frank Krygowski >> >> > I once was driving down a poorly-lit street after dark. An >> > African-American gentleman, dressed head to toe in black, was crossing >> > the street in the direction I was traveling. Unfortunately for him, I >> > was turning left. I literally didn't see him until my headlights swung >> > around, of course I immediately stopped, but he was rather irate because >> > I "almost hit him." >> >> > I do not feel that I was negligent in any way and wish people would use >> > some goddamn common sense. Just because you have the right of way does >> > not mean that you're not an idiot. >> >> > Of course, we know that you just hate cars, so don't let reality get in >> > the way of a good rant. >> >> You should be more careful. > > Please elaborate. As is, your post makes no sense. First off, you're complaining about almost running over a pedestrian due to your carelessness. Now you're complaining about how my admonishment to be more careful somehow "makes no sense." You must be dizzy by now. Maybe one of these days you'll figure it out. I sure hope so. -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 10:02:56
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 8, 8:44 am, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within > limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else. The only way to GUARANTEE you won't harm anyone else is to not operate the machinery at all. There is absolutely no other way. Having 5 sets of eyes in the car won't do it. Only travelling at 5 mph won't do it. The only thing that can possibly accomplish your standard is to never operate. Period. That is why it is so difficult for people to believe you when you claim you are not totally anti-car. I learned a long time ago that one should not rely on a single point of failure. Wearing dark clothing at night in traffic is doing exactly that. Wearing light colored clothing does not shift responsibility from the driver; it only reduces the danger from that single point of failure (the driver). That danger always exists, not matter how much care is taken, no matter how much speed is reduced, etc. Austin
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 07:28:57
From: N8N
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 8, 9:44 am, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 8, 9:05 am, N8N <njna...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > On Oct 7, 9:49 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > Hmm. Perhaps you're right. He should have become Scandinavian, for > > > your convenience. > > > > Or wasn't that what you meant? > > > *sigh* > > > Of course that's not what I meant, which you'd realize if you thought > > about it for more than half a second. > > :-) Nate, I've thought about the issue of non-motorist conspicuity > more than you ever will. And yes, I understood your meaning, > including your description of the guy's race. I thought it was > demeaning in more than one way. > > > The point was, if you're going > > to be out walking on a poorly lit street after dark, it wouldn't be a > > bad idea to wear at least one piece of light colored clothing, > > especially if your skin happens to be dark as well. Basic common > > sense. > > Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within > limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else. > > You were driving on a road where pedestrian crossing was a > possibility. Some will not be carrying flashlights to warn > incompetent drivers of their presence. So, don't be incompetent when > you drive. > > Pretty simple, really. > > > > But I do hate puerile car worshippers who think it's their right to > > > drive everywhere at the maximum speed they desire, no matter what harm > > > they do to anyone or anything else. > > > And *only* car drivers have any responsibility for their actions, > > despite the fact that pedestrians and cyclists tend to be just as lax > > in their conformance to applicable laws and common sense. we know. > > First, I doubt that there's any difference between the three groups in > their obedience of laws and their common sense. But pedestrians and > cyclists have almost no potential for doing serious harm to others > through their negligence. Motorists have great potential for harming > others, so they have more responsibility. Yet most treat driving with > as much care as watching TV. > > If you'd hit and injured that pedestrian, it would have been YOUR > fault, legally and morally. Don't whine about what the pedestrian > should have done for your convenience. Take responsibility, like an > adult. > > - Frank Krygowski I'm not even going to bother responding to your message in any meaningful way because your biases are all too blatant. Fortunately most people aren't like you. Most people realize that safety is a group effort, and trying to shove all the responsibility onto one group is doomed to failure. nate
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 13:44:45
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 8, 9:05 am, N8N <njna...@hotmail.com > wrote: > On Oct 7, 9:49 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > Hmm. Perhaps you're right. He should have become Scandinavian, for > > your convenience. > > > Or wasn't that what you meant? > > *sigh* > > Of course that's not what I meant, which you'd realize if you thought > about it for more than half a second. :-) Nate, I've thought about the issue of non-motorist conspicuity more than you ever will. And yes, I understood your meaning, including your description of the guy's race. I thought it was demeaning in more than one way. > The point was, if you're going > to be out walking on a poorly lit street after dark, it wouldn't be a > bad idea to wear at least one piece of light colored clothing, > especially if your skin happens to be dark as well. Basic common > sense. Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else. You were driving on a road where pedestrian crossing was a possibility. Some will not be carrying flashlights to warn incompetent drivers of their presence. So, don't be incompetent when you drive. Pretty simple, really. > > But I do hate puerile car worshippers who think it's their right to > > drive everywhere at the maximum speed they desire, no matter what harm > > they do to anyone or anything else. > > And *only* car drivers have any responsibility for their actions, > despite the fact that pedestrians and cyclists tend to be just as lax > in their conformance to applicable laws and common sense. we know. First, I doubt that there's any difference between the three groups in their obedience of laws and their common sense. But pedestrians and cyclists have almost no potential for doing serious harm to others through their negligence. Motorists have great potential for harming others, so they have more responsibility. Yet most treat driving with as much care as watching TV. If you'd hit and injured that pedestrian, it would have been YOUR fault, legally and morally. Don't whine about what the pedestrian should have done for your convenience. Take responsibility, like an adult. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 08:51:41
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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frkrygow@gmail.com aka Frank Krygowski wrote: > ... > Even more basic is, when operating dangerous machinery, operate within > limits that guarantee you won't harm anyone else.... That is an impossible standard for a motor vehicle operator to meet. Furthermore, it is also an impossible standard for a cyclist or pedestrian. Since you are an engineer, look up the LRFD method. Notice that the probability of failure can never be reduced to zero, no matter how high the resistance factors. Similarly, have you even designed anything with a factor of safety of infinity? That is what you are proposing with the word "guarantee". If you were a consulting engineer, and used the word "guarantee", you would void your "Errors and Omissions" coverage. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia Beer - It's not just for breakfast anymore!
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 20:59:38
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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In article <1191851085.802738.6550@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, frkrygow@gmail.com says... > If you'd hit and injured that pedestrian, it would have been YOUR > fault, legally and morally. Correct, if the jury isn't packed with drivers who think, "There but for the grace of God go I." A friend of the family was driving one night in the rain and heard a thump. Turned out her rear-view mirror had smacked a teenager in the back of his head -- yes, he was black, and yes, he was wearing dark clothes, and yes, he was riding at night with nothing more than dirty, misaligned CPSC reflectors. She said she honestly didn't see him before she hit him, and everyone believed her. That didn't mean she wasn't liable, it meant she was driving negligently but not criminally. She was very lucky to have a million-dollar umbrella policy, since her liability went well beyond her car insurance limits. -- josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam <http://www.phred.org/~josh/ > Braze your own bicycle frames. See <http://www.phred.org/~josh/build/build.html >
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 06:06:17
From: N8N
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 9:42 pm, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > In article <fec1ge01...@news2.newsguy.com>, > Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> writes: > > > > > > > frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > >> On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: > > >>>Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly > >>>impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the > >>>law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is > >>>backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a > >>>lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing > >>>no-less!) pedestrian! > > >> Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > >> going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > >> - Frank Krygowski > > > I once was driving down a poorly-lit street after dark. An > > African-American gentleman, dressed head to toe in black, was crossing > > the street in the direction I was traveling. Unfortunately for him, I > > was turning left. I literally didn't see him until my headlights swung > > around, of course I immediately stopped, but he was rather irate because > > I "almost hit him." > > > I do not feel that I was negligent in any way and wish people would use > > some goddamn common sense. Just because you have the right of way does > > not mean that you're not an idiot. > > > Of course, we know that you just hate cars, so don't let reality get in > > the way of a good rant. > > You should be more careful. Please elaborate. As is, your post makes no sense. nate
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 06:05:46
From: N8N
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 9:49 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 7, 9:35 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net> wrote: > > > > > > > frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: > > > >>Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly > > >>impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the > > >>law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is > > >>backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a > > >>lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing > > >>no-less!) pedestrian! > > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > > - Frank Krygowski > > > I once was driving down a poorly-lit street after dark. An > > African-American gentleman, dressed head to toe in black, was crossing > > the street in the direction I was traveling. Unfortunately for him, I > > was turning left. I literally didn't see him until my headlights swung > > around, of course I immediately stopped, but he was rather irate because > > I "almost hit him." > > > I do not feel that I was negligent in any way and wish people would use > > some goddamn common sense. Just because you have the right of way does > > not mean that you're not an idiot. > > Hmm. Perhaps you're right. He should have become Scandinavian, for > your convenience. > > Or wasn't that what you meant? *sigh* Of course that's not what I meant, which you'd realize if you thought about it for more than half a second. The point was, if you're going to be out walking on a poorly lit street after dark, it wouldn't be a bad idea to wear at least one piece of light colored clothing, especially if your skin happens to be dark as well. Basic common sense. > > > Of course, we know that you just hate cars, so don't let reality get in > > the way of a good rant. > > "Just hate cars" is overly simplistic. > > But I do hate puerile car worshippers who think it's their right to > drive everywhere at the maximum speed they desire, no matter what harm > they do to anyone or anything else. And *only* car drivers have any responsibility for their actions, despite the fact that pedestrians and cyclists tend to be just as lax in their conformance to applicable laws and common sense. we know. nate
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 06:06:26
From: Eeyore
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam > bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. > > http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 > > Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. Think of the customising potential. Graham
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 23:01:33
From: DYM
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com > wrote in news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: > > > Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > >> Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam >> bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. >> >> http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 >> >> Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > > I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. > > Think of the customising potential. > > Graham > Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! Doug
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 19:08:57
From: Nate Nagel
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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DYM wrote: > Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote in > news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: > > >> >>Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: >> >> >>>Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam >>>bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. >>> >>>http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 >>> >>>Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk >> >>I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. >> >>Think of the customising potential. >> >>Graham >> > > > Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound > just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! > > Doug It already exists: http://www.vroombox.com/vroombox/ I'm ashamed that I know this. nate (making noise the old fashioned way) -- replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply. http://members.cox.net/njnagel
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 21:53:24
From: zeldabee
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Nate Nagel <njnagel@roosters.net > wrote: > DYM wrote: > > Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote in > > news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: > >> > >>Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > >>>Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > >> > >>I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. > >> > >>Think of the customising potential. > > > > Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound > > just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! Oh! I want my bike to sound like a choo-choo train! > It already exists: > > http://www.vroombox.com/vroombox/ > > I'm ashamed that I know this. > > nate > > (making noise the old fashioned way) Rats, it's expensive. I'd like to get one for my four-year-old. Come to think of it, he's *very* good at making car noises. If I ever get a Prius, I could drive with the window down, and have him do his thing. [Random cuteness: The other night, he was in a cardboard box "driving." Vrooom vrooom, etc. Then silence. I look over at him and he sighs and says, "Traffic."] Back on topic, though, a friend has a Prius, and complains about how quiet it is. She's always startling people when she drives on side streets. -- z e l d a b e e @ g m a i l . c o m
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 18:46:07
From: Nate Nagel
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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zeldabee wrote: > Nate Nagel <njnagel@roosters.net> wrote: > >>DYM wrote: >> >>>Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote in >>>news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: >>> >>>>Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > > >>>>>Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk >>>> >>>>I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. >>>> >>>>Think of the customising potential. >>> >>>Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound >>>just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! > > > Oh! I want my bike to sound like a choo-choo train! > > >>It already exists: >> >>http://www.vroombox.com/vroombox/ >> >>I'm ashamed that I know this. >> >>nate >> >>(making noise the old fashioned way) > > > Rats, it's expensive. I'd like to get one for my four-year-old. Come to > think of it, he's *very* good at making car noises. If I ever get a Prius, > I could drive with the window down, and have him do his thing. [Random > cuteness: The other night, he was in a cardboard box "driving." Vrooom > vrooom, etc. Then silence. I look over at him and he sighs and says, > "Traffic."] > > Back on topic, though, a friend has a Prius, and complains about how quiet > it is. She's always startling people when she drives on side streets. > Do what I did, get an old Studebaker, drop a 10.25:1 compression 289 in it, and when ordering a new exhaust from Don Simmons, ask for the "loud tone" mufflers :) ("Studemania" can probably attest to how sweet that combo sounds, although he's never heard my particular car run.) If your four year old is anything like I was at that age he'll have a stupid, silly grin on his face every time you nail it (well, so will you for that matter.) Of course, gas mileage may suffer a little bit relative to a Prius... nate -- replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply. http://members.cox.net/njnagel
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Date: 09 Oct 2007 21:30:15
From: DYM
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Nate Nagel <njnagel@roosters.net > wrote in news:feeda8112ac@news2.newsguy.com: > DYM wrote: >> Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote in >> news:4709BAD2.B1BA6EF4@hotmail.com: >> >> >>> >>>Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: >>> >>> >>>>Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam >>>>bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. >>>> >>>>http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 >>>> >>>>Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk >>> >>>I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. >>> >>>Think of the customising potential. >>> >>>Graham >>> >> >> >> Model railroaders buy digitized sound chips for their models that sound >> just like the real thing. Imagine the customizing potential! >> >> Doug > > It already exists: > > http://www.vroombox.com/vroombox/ > > I'm ashamed that I know this. > > nate > > (making noise the old fashioned way) > I was thinking more along the lines of the sounds of a Pennsy K4 or T1 coming from a Kia. Chug-chug-chug. Doug
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 15:03:45
From: Bill Marcum
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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["Followup-To:" header set to rec.bicycles.misc.] On 2007-10-08, Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com > wrote: > > > Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > >> Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam >> bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. >> >> http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 >> >> Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > > I agree. Such cars should be fitted with a "Vroom, vroom" loudspeaker. > And for bicycles, the old reliable cards in the spokes.
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 19:03:36
From: Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > - Frank Krygowski Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both drivers and peds. But the auto industry, which makes a fortune off car crashes, pays the media to glamorize speeding and the idiot american goes along with the brainwashing like they always do.
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 00:32:44
From: necromancer
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS: > On Oct 7, 7:30 pm, frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > > - Frank Krygowski > > Yup - slow driving would make our highways a lot safer for both > drivers and peds. But the auto industry, which makes a fortune off car > crashes, pays the media to glamorize speeding and the idiot american > goes along with the brainwashing like they always do. k0000000k-a-DooooooodddddllllEEEE-D000000000!!!!!! -- -- "There's not a shred of evidence that the jerries murdered anything close to 7 million jooz. Another monstrous lie just like the 9-11 official story. " -- Laura Bush murdered her boyfriend, 12/01/2004 Ref: http://tinyurl.com/9oog5 Message-ID: <780ea958.0411302101.5ef25456@posting.google.com >
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 18:58:12
From: Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 10:35 am, "Mike Kruger" <Mik...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > I own a Prius, and this is a problem when backing up. The car makes NO > noise. It is my responsibility to look -- absolutely my responsibility -- > but a little help never hurt anyone and there are small kids in the > neighborhood. > > I've looked for the replacement backup lights that make noise, but they > don't seem to be made in the bulb size the Prius uses (yes, even the ones > that say they "fit all cars"). If anyone has found these, please post a > link. Just hit the horn before backing up. I do that a lot anyway even though my car is standard IC.
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Date:
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 18:49:15
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 9:35 pm, Nate Nagel <njna...@roosters.net > wrote: > frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: > > >>Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly > >>impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the > >>law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is > >>backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a > >>lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing > >>no-less!) pedestrian! > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > > - Frank Krygowski > > I once was driving down a poorly-lit street after dark. An > African-American gentleman, dressed head to toe in black, was crossing > the street in the direction I was traveling. Unfortunately for him, I > was turning left. I literally didn't see him until my headlights swung > around, of course I immediately stopped, but he was rather irate because > I "almost hit him." > > I do not feel that I was negligent in any way and wish people would use > some goddamn common sense. Just because you have the right of way does > not mean that you're not an idiot. Hmm. Perhaps you're right. He should have become Scandinavian, for your convenience. Or wasn't that what you meant? > Of course, we know that you just hate cars, so don't let reality get in > the way of a good rant. "Just hate cars" is overly simplistic. But I do hate puerile car worshippers who think it's their right to drive everywhere at the maximum speed they desire, no matter what harm they do to anyone or anything else. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 18:42:50
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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In article <fec1ge01pvs@news2.newsguy.com >, Nate Nagel <njnagel@roosters.net > writes: > frkrygow@gmail.com wrote: >> On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: >> >>>Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly >>>impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the >>>law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is >>>backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a >>>lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing >>>no-less!) pedestrian! >> >> >> Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're >> going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. >> >> - Frank Krygowski > > I once was driving down a poorly-lit street after dark. An > African-American gentleman, dressed head to toe in black, was crossing > the street in the direction I was traveling. Unfortunately for him, I > was turning left. I literally didn't see him until my headlights swung > around, of course I immediately stopped, but he was rather irate because > I "almost hit him." > > I do not feel that I was negligent in any way and wish people would use > some goddamn common sense. Just because you have the right of way does > not mean that you're not an idiot. > > Of course, we know that you just hate cars, so don't let reality get in > the way of a good rant. You should be more careful. -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 18:30:38
From:
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com > wrote: > > Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly > impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the > law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is > backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a > lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing > no-less!) pedestrian! Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 21:35:09
From: Nate Nagel
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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frkrygow@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 7, 5:13 pm, jcr <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: > >>Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly >>impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the >>law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is >>backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a >>lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing >>no-less!) pedestrian! > > > Seems to me the law is correct. Slow down. Watch where you're > going. The world wasn't built for motorists exclusive use. > > - Frank Krygowski I once was driving down a poorly-lit street after dark. An African-American gentleman, dressed head to toe in black, was crossing the street in the direction I was traveling. Unfortunately for him, I was turning left. I literally didn't see him until my headlights swung around, of course I immediately stopped, but he was rather irate because I "almost hit him." I do not feel that I was negligent in any way and wish people would use some goddamn common sense. Just because you have the right of way does not mean that you're not an idiot. Of course, we know that you just hate cars, so don't let reality get in the way of a good rant. nate -- replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply. http://members.cox.net/njnagel
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 18:25:18
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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In article <Pq2dnRKYHOrO0ZTanZ2dneKdnZydnZ2d@comcast.com >, jcr <nospam@nospam.com > writes: > Jym Dyer wrote: >> =v= I agree that the overall problem is motorists who refuse to >> yield to pedestrians, which has morphed into a streetscape where >> pedestrians are largely not taken into account. That's the REAL >> problem; addressing anything short of that is foolish. >> > > Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly > impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the > law says they have the right-of-way. {\sarcasm How awful! Stoopid law! If that's what The Law says, then The Law is a ass! A idiot! } Y'know what breaks my heart? When I cheerfully stop on my bike for pedestrians, and they apologize to me for "making me stop" -- IOW, for my respecting their basic rights of mobility. They'd probably apologize to you too, but you can't hear 'em while you're cut off from the real world, inside your car. -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 13:20:42
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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. > > "I'm walking right in back of it and it's moving and I didn't realize it > until it nearly touched me," Murphy said, describing the first of her > scares. "I never realized how dependent I was on my ears until I almost > got > hit." Umm, I know the Toyota Prius BEEPS when it backs up. I would assume other hybrids do, too, because they only use the electric motor when at slow speeds. I think this woman is just distracted or talking on her cell.
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 17:10:33
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 11:35 am, "Mike Kruger" <Mik...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote:> Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam > > bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. > > >http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 > > > Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > > Associated Press > > Article Launched: 10/02/2007 11:56:29 PM PDT > > > BALTIMORE - Gas-electric hybrid vehicles, the status symbol for the > > environmentally conscientious, are coming under attack from a > > constituency that doesn't drive: the blind. > > I own a Prius, and this is a problem when backing up. The car makes NO > noise. It is my responsibility to look -- absolutely my responsibility -- > but a little help never hurt anyone and there are small kids in the > neighborhood. > > I've looked for the replacement backup lights that make noise, but they > don't seem to be made in the bulb size the Prius uses (yes, even the ones > that say they "fit all cars"). If anyone has found these, please post a > link. http://tinyurl.com/3c559v Read the comment. :-D
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 14:25:52
From: Mike Kruger
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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landotter wrote: > On Oct 7, 11:35 am, "Mike Kruger" <Mik...@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >> Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote:> Same problem has >> always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam >>> bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. >> >>> http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 >> >>> Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk >>> Associated Press >>> Article Launched: 10/02/2007 11:56:29 PM PDT >> >>> BALTIMORE - Gas-electric hybrid vehicles, the status symbol for the >>> environmentally conscientious, are coming under attack from a >>> constituency that doesn't drive: the blind. >> >> I own a Prius, and this is a problem when backing up. The car makes >> NO >> noise. It is my responsibility to look -- absolutely my >> responsibility -- >> but a little help never hurt anyone and there are small kids in the >> neighborhood. >> >> I've looked for the replacement backup lights that make noise, but >> they >> don't seem to be made in the bulb size the Prius uses (yes, even the >> ones >> that say they "fit all cars"). If anyone has found these, please >> post a >> link. > > http://tinyurl.com/3c559v > > Read the comment. :-D Thanks for calling my attention to the comment!! But there's a link to a more standard back-up alarm that I'll investigate. I was looking for simple (replacement backup bulb that beeps), but maybe the one-wire connection wouldn't be so hard. http://tinyurl.com/2em8d6
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 09:47:51
From: Jym Dyer
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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=v= I agree that the overall problem is motorists who refuse to yield to pedestrians, which has morphed into a streetscape where pedestrians are largely not taken into account. That's the REAL problem; addressing anything short of that is foolish. > I own a Prius, and this is a problem when backing up. The car > makes NO noise. =v= Huh? I thought it made a beeping sound and there were self-satisfied geeks bragging that they figured out how to hack it to turn the sound off. Or is that another model? <_Jym_ >
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 17:13:05
From: jcr
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Jym Dyer wrote: > =v= I agree that the overall problem is motorists who refuse to > yield to pedestrians, which has morphed into a streetscape where > pedestrians are largely not taken into account. That's the REAL > problem; addressing anything short of that is foolish. > Morning commutes around here, pedestrians wearing dark clothing (nearly impossible to see) will just walk right out in front of you because the law says they have the right-of-way. Seems to me that the law is backwards. It's certainly a LOT easier for a pedestrian to see a lighted vehicle than for a a driver to see an unlit (in dark clothing no-less!) pedestrian!
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 17:03:07
From: Mike Kruger
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Jym Dyer wrote: > =v= I agree that the overall problem is motorists who refuse to > yield to pedestrians, which has morphed into a streetscape where > pedestrians are largely not taken into account. That's the REAL > problem; addressing anything short of that is foolish. > >> I own a Prius, and this is a problem when backing up. The car >> makes NO noise. > > =v= Huh? I thought it made a beeping sound and there were > self-satisfied geeks bragging that they figured out how to hack > it to turn the sound off. Or is that another model? > <_Jym_> The beeping sound in reverse is audible to the driver inside the car but is NOT audible outside the car (at least on my 2006).
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 16:35:34
From: Mike Kruger
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS wrote: > Same problem has always existed, even for sighted people, with goddam > bicyclists. Noisemakers should be on hybrid cars and bikes too. > > http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_7068419?nclick_check=1 > > Blind people say quiet hybrid cars pose safety risk > Associated Press > Article Launched: 10/02/2007 11:56:29 PM PDT > > BALTIMORE - Gas-electric hybrid vehicles, the status symbol for the > environmentally conscientious, are coming under attack from a > constituency that doesn't drive: the blind. > I own a Prius, and this is a problem when backing up. The car makes NO noise. It is my responsibility to look -- absolutely my responsibility -- but a little help never hurt anyone and there are small kids in the neighborhood. I've looked for the replacement backup lights that make noise, but they don't seem to be made in the bulb size the Prius uses (yes, even the ones that say they "fit all cars"). If anyone has found these, please post a link.
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 21:08:33
From: Tom D
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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"Mike Kruger" <MikeKr@mouse-potato.com > wrote in message news:qV7Oi.5061$4V6.1180@newssvr14.news.prodigy.net... > I've looked for the replacement backup lights that make noise, but they > don't seem to be made in the bulb size the Prius uses (yes, even the ones > that say they "fit all cars"). If anyone has found these, please post a > link. I got an email about this item the other day: http://www.safetybeep.com/ It sticks on the backup light, and when the light is on, it beeps. No idea if it works or not, or how well. -=- Tom
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Date: 08 Oct 2007 00:52:46
From: Mike Kruger
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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Tom D wrote: > "Mike Kruger" <MikeKr@mouse-potato.com> wrote in message > news:qV7Oi.5061$4V6.1180@newssvr14.news.prodigy.net... >> I've looked for the replacement backup lights that make noise, but >> they don't seem to be made in the bulb size the Prius uses (yes, >> even the ones that say they "fit all cars"). If anyone has found >> these, please post a link. > > I got an email about this item the other day: > > http://www.safetybeep.com/ > > It sticks on the backup light, and when the light is on, it beeps. No idea > if it works or not, or how well. > Looks simple enough. It's cheap enough. I ordered one. I'll report back after a time. This is a very annoying website, but then I thought that might be the case since you mentioned you got an e-mail about the item.
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 08:44:45
From: Speeders & Drunk Drivers are MURDERERS
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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On Oct 7, 9:27 am, "Cathy Kearns" <cathy_kea...@yahoo.com > wrote: > The problem isn't that the cars are too quiet, or that people rely on the > noise to jump out of the way. It's that for some reason, some drivers (or > even some bicyclists) are expecting pedestrians to get out of their way. That's part of it, to be sure. People in cars or on bikes want to push around the walkers. It's like the so-called work boat rule you see on water - The bigger boat has the right of way.
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Date: 07 Oct 2007 08:27:42
From: Cathy Kearns
Subject: Re: Blind People Protest - Hybrid Cars Are Too Quiet
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The problem isn't that the cars are too quiet, or that people rely on the noise to jump out of the way. It's that for some reason, some drivers (or even some bicyclists) are expecting pedestrians to get out of their way. Drivers shouldn't be backing up when there are pedestrians walking behind them whether they are in environmentally friendly vehicles or not. Drivers and cyclists shouldn't be buzzing pedestrians. Now I do understand some of the blind people protest, in that there are many intersections with signals that do not have the sound to signal when the walk sign is activated. I helped one blind man cross our big intersection one quiet Sunday morning because there were no cars, so he didn't hear anything, so he wasn't sure when the light was green. Audio signals would help.
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