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2009-11-17
, 13:01
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Posts: 376 |
Thanked: 511 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Greece
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#52
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As far as I am the judge of every truth in the universe, there is NO more danger between talking to someone who is in the car and not in the car. There is however a difference between having a regular conversation and trying to solve a customers problems which requires concentration.
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2009-11-17
, 13:02
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Posts: 203 |
Thanked: 68 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#53
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I dont still understand the analogy. those same buttons could be replaced with touch screen having the buttons and still the functionality is all the same.
positioning is one issue but with mobile & touchscreen the osk buttons can be placed with great accuracy to same places where hardkeys could be in other phones...
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2009-11-17
, 13:03
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Posts: 316 |
Thanked: 150 times |
Joined on May 2006
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#54
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2009-11-17
, 13:18
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Posts: 1,309 |
Thanked: 1,187 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
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#55
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Well, given that you were quoting my post, it was really hard to tell that you weren't responding to me.
You may feel safer with hardware accessories for answering the phone will driving, but again, the studies show, some of which I cite in my post above, that you actually are not driving any better.
(...)
And obviously you could just let the phone ring and answer itself. That would be the easiest thing to do.
Part of the problem is the talking itself, people are much less distracted when listening than when talking (again demonstrated in university studies).
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2009-11-17
, 14:01
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Posts: 203 |
Thanked: 68 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#56
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This is not a feeling, but a fact. If you have the phone in the pocket and someone calls you, you are instantly a threat in traffic. The very minute you notice it, you are distracted. And then there's a SPIKE in inability to concentrate on the traffic. How fast and easy you get over that spike is important.
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Of course, I will grant that rejecting all incoming calls is safer than having them. I guess that your initial statement was that, people should not talk in the phone at all. That would be safer. (The same goes for passenger conversations, radios, singing. Chewing bubble gum.)
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2009-11-17
, 14:51
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Posts: 1,309 |
Thanked: 1,187 times |
Joined on Nov 2008
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#57
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It just seems like you're coming up with excuses to evade the point that talking on the phone is dangerous.
I really don't find a ringing cell phone that distracting. I'd be surprised if anyone else does.
All distractions are not equal. (...) It's just silly to act as if all distractions are exactly the same and have exactly the same risk involved.
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2009-11-17
, 15:12
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Posts: 4,384 |
Thanked: 5,524 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ ˙ǝɹǝɥʍou
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#58
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My subjective experience is really clear - if you don't have a hands free solution then you're a bigger threat in traffic than if you have one. I have no doubt about it because I have tried both and the difference was huge.
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2009-11-17
, 15:15
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Posts: 73 |
Thanked: 79 times |
Joined on May 2009
@ Virginia
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#59
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2009-11-17
, 15:25
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Posts: 319 |
Thanked: 289 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Lisboa, Portugal
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#60
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positioning is one issue but with mobile & touchscreen the osk buttons can be placed with great accuracy to same places where hardkeys could be in other phones...
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