mobile

a good driver by Richard

How come that the second safest country to drive in allow the use of mobile phones while driving, when it’s forbidden in the rest of the world?

The European average fatalities per million inhabitants is 55. Sweden has 31 fatalities, worse is Leetonia with 100 but UK has only 28 fatalities, according to UNECE.

The number one cause of car accidents is not a criminal that drove drunk, sped or ran a red light. Distracted drivers are the top cause of car accidents today. I do agree it’s dangerous to text, managing a crying baby or speeding being late…

However my personal feeling is that drivers take greater risks hiding their phones from the police by keeping them more unseen, rather than drivers who keep their phone in front of them, in the line of action.

My conclusion is that you should not be texting on the phone, eating or picking up your kids toys while driving in heavy traffic... And if we then stick to the statistics, it is safer to teach people to drive properly with a phone, than simply banning phone use while driving, or?

who needs a payphone by Richard

Reinventing the payphone is not only about a sleeker design or a digital display, it is about radically re-imagining a public service.

Recently in the U.S. there were numerous interesting designs at the New York City's Reinvent Payphones competition, and NYFi was selected in the NYC's Payphones challenge.

NYFi is an interactive portal to public information, goods, and services, a hub for free wireless internet access, and an open infrastructure for future applications. Even if each NYFi hub would dish out free WiFi and off load off of the cellular network, display ads in a convenient way and works as bus ticket machines, Muni Meters, MetroCard distributors…

Who needs a payphone in NYC today, when the global cellular penetration reached 91% and mobile subscriptions is around 6.4 billion?