• Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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    1 year ago

    Ahhh, the 'ol “I’m too lazy to push a button (in my city wave in proximity of touchless sensor) to signal my intent on behalf of my own safety but roads are still super dangerous so let’s make everyone else suffer” defense.

    My way we have these dynamic, responsive systems for high viability and they work great in my city. I can see a pedestrian wanting to cross 3-4x the distance and have tons of time to stop not just safely, but casually safely. They’re awesome and I’ve advocated for this tech in the past.

    It’s great tech the city installed for pedestrian safety. Signal intent; Push the button.

    Hmm, good PSA slogan.

    Edit: Crossed my mind this article seems written to rile up a specific marketable demographic. Everyone here knew the answer before reading anything. I’m guessing doubleclick/google has some more data points on a bunch of us to sell ads to… Just say’n.

    • Steve@communick.news
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      1 year ago

      Ahhh, the 'ol “I’m in too much of a hurry to pay attention to others who aren’t able to kill me in my 2 ton vehicle. I need someone to shine flashing lights in my face for me to notice anything outside my lane” defense.

      See how that works?

      The truth is, if things were designed properly, pedestrians would never be trying to cross roads where cars are able to go over 15mph.

      • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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        1 year ago

        See how that works?

        Not really. I mean you made mocking text, but doesn’t apply.

        A) you don’t know this, but no car I’ve ever owned weighs 2 tons. That’s one of the fuckcar points I totally agree with. Cars are too heavy and impractically large. One car of mine is 2400lbs, the other is 2100lbs.

        B) not in a hurry, as I mentioned, I can casually slow down with plenty of time. There are two intersections in mind when I wrote that post. One was the crest of a hill where the elevated flashing lights give drivers an additional 8-10 seconds of advanced notice. It’s really nice and logical. The second intersection has many trees (which look awesome) but they block light which makes it harder to see. Its also a 30mph road. Pedestrians don’t often realize popping their heads out from behind a dumpster doesn’t give anyone much time to react. The flashing lights give drivers, including me, advanced warning almost a block away to slow way down and prepare to stop.

        I know this is fuckcars, but don’t hate on pedestrian safety systems. That’s ludicrous! You’re just doing a disservice to your cause.

    • Jeanschyso@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Lmao “good tech” my ass. There is a beg button in my town and about 1% of drivers completely ignore it. That is way too many people just speeding through.

      • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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        1 year ago

        Had to look up what a beg button is. Lmao, dude… no. 🤣 Remember how long everyone had to wait before button and sensors entered the game?

        Anyways, 1% ignore rate would imply the other 99% work. Betting those stats don’t improve if you don’t tap that button.

    • JoBo@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      I didn’t know the answer because we don’t have anything like this in the UK. Here, we have crossings controlled by traffic lights, where pedestrians press a button and the lights will eventually turn red to stop traffic. And ‘zebra’ crossings where pedestrians have automatic right of way and it is an offence not to stop if someone is waiting to cross.

      This seems to be a weird Canadian hybrid where pedestrians have automatic right of way but drivers pretend they don’t know that unless a flashing light is there to remind them?