Ar an chéad lá is fiche de mí Méan Fómhair, scríobh occam:
> On 21/09/2024 12:52, Silvano wrote:
> > Hibou hat am 21.09.2024 um 09:20 geschrieben:
> >> Le 20/09/2024 à 20:05, Sam Plusnet a écrit :
> >>>
> >>> Also, most modern cars can be persuaded to display speed (digitally)
> >>> in either mph or kph to suit your current needs.
> >>
> >> Our recent hire cars have displayed the speed limit, as read from limit
> >> signs via their cameras. It is often wrong, displaying a recent speed
> >> limit, not the current one - unsurprisingly, since in France there are a
> >> variety of signs that set the speed (a crossed-out place name, for
> >> instance), the camera lens may be dirty, a lorry may mask a sign, and so
> >> on.
> >>
> >> Apparently, the crazy EU has made this flawed system the basis for
> >> mandatory speed limiters (and the crazy UK has followed suit). If you
> >> run into someone stuck at 30 kph on a 130 kph autoroute, that's probably
> >> the reason.
A mandatory warning is part of the law, but actual restriction is not, so
should you be in those occasional situations where breaking the speed limit is
safer than following it, you can (usually, depending on your manufacturer) just
keep the foot on the accelerator despite the alarm.
> >> "However, our experience of such systems suggests they can get it wrong.
> >> In one instance, a car's traffic sign recognition system picked up a
> >> 30mph sign on a turning off a dual carriage and dramatically slowed
> >> down, despite the fact the car was actually travelling along the outside
> >> lane" -
> >> <
https://www.parkers.co.uk/car-advice/speed-limiters-what-they-mean-for-you/>
> >>
> >> God preserve us from government!
Apart from things like seatbelt laws, high taxes on tobacco, enforced rules on
food safety, regulation of medication? Or are you completely fine with easily
avoidable death and major disability, shorter and worse-quality lives, mass
poisonings, more mass poisonings? The middle option saves on taxes given if you
die at 63 from lung cancer you won’t draw much in the way of state pension, so
there is a financial but not humanitarian argument for it. There’s no argument
for the rest.
> > Japan was already wiser 40 years ago, but the more appropriate name is
> > probably "speed limit warnings".
> > A friend gave me a ride there when an alarm sound went off.
> > - What does this noise mean?
> > - I was driving at over 100 km/h (the speed limit on their highways at
> > that time). We have a warning system on all our cars.
> > - What about all those cars overtaking us? Do they produce the same noise?
> > - Yes.
>
> This sound warning is optional on my car (i.e. can be disabled). The
> visual warning (on the GPS display) however, is not. As soon as you go
> over the speed limit, the colour of the limit indicator changes (to
> red). The absence of a sound warning is a blessing, rather than a
> handicap. It is annoying most of the time, and can be dangerous at other
> times e.g. when you are accelerating for a good reason.
-- ‘As I sat looking up at the Guinness ad, I could never figure out /How your man stayed up on the surfboard after fourteen pints of stout’(C. Moore)