- Joined
- Aug 15, 2020
- Posts
- 6,439
I made Facebook page with videos of idiots on the road or such. I will most videos here if people want to see. if so here is the first.
I almost never see a right hook anymore people wait for me. but not thins guy and no turn signal. if you like these let me know.
www.facebook.com
I see enough idiots driving on the roads around here in the Washington, DC area -- no need to look at videos of idiots in other places! That said, yes, it is truly concerning that at times it seems that people are too casual (careless!) and that often they really do not seem to be paying full attention when they are at the wheel of a very powerful vehicle which can easily kill or injure someone else, or do significant damage to another vehicle.
The county where I live has been adding bicycle lanes here-and-there in an effort to encourage and support bicycling as opposed to someone always driving a car somewhere, but frankly, I wouldn't feel safe riding a bike on one of those, as we just have too many nutty, irresponsible drivers of cars in this area. Years ago I did love bicycling to work when for a while I lived within reasonable biking distance of my workplace and had a nice bike path (part of a county-wide walking trail) to use so that I wasn't on any roads with vehicular traffic for very long, but I sure as heck wouldn't attempt to do even that these days.
I see more gas powered things on our bike paths as a issue. The pandemic brought out so many bad cyclists on regular bikes it was crazy.Interestingly enough in today's Washington Post there was an article about e-bikes and how they can sometimes be dangerous, too, especially when ridden at too-fast speeds in areas where they are not even supposed to be used at all.
Hey, I was test-riding a lovely Bacchetta Carbon Aero on the MUT that runs up the valley, doing just fine for 8 miles or more – then there was the dog on a leash …The pandemic brought out so many bad cyclists on regular bikes it was crazy.
This is one reason I'm not against the "three class" model legislation which makes it a bit easier to outline a couple categories and the rules around them. E-bikes as a category spans the stuff that can get passed easily by someone on a working road bike, to the unrestricted stuff that gets into the range of a gas powered mini-bike. That's a wide swath, to be honest. And I really don't want to see e-bikes as a whole get painted by the brush of folks on the unrestricted bikes causing problems, or the idea that an idiot on a class 1 e-bike is somehow fundamentally different than an idiot on a bike. Yes e-bikes are heavier, but the rider is still by far the bulk of the weight, even more so in the US.Interestingly enough in today's Washington Post there was an article about e-bikes and how they can sometimes be dangerous, too, especially when ridden at too-fast speeds in areas where they are not even supposed to be used at all.
I see more gas powered things on our bike paths as a issue. The pandemic brought out so many bad cyclists on regular bikes it was crazy.
The Tesla has 6 (I think) camera angles that are constantly recording and any time you witness something you can press the record button and it automatically takes the last 10 minutes from the bugger and writes it to the memory stick in your glove compartment, all very next level and cool. Even if people do stupid little things I'll still record just to look back and laugh.There are hundreds of videos like this on YouTube. Since dash cams are so common these days, source material is endless. Sub-genres include incidents that resulted in accidents, videos from truck cabs, "instant karma" sequences where a driver does something illegal and is pulled over soon thereafter, and even mishaps where truckers think they can sneak through a railroad crossing (the train always wins).
I admit these are fascinating to watch, and they've made me more defensive and careful behind the wheel. Many collisions occur at intersections where people either go through a red light or turn even though they can't avoid oncoming traffic, so I've become much more wary approaching them.
As an aside - I did pen a letter to Bezos a few years ago that, as they had high ambitions of delivering packages via drones, and the FAA is woefully inadequate to police / manage this consumer airspace (and flying cars will follow one day soon and also need a guiding hand), that they should establish a national (and international) standard / service / control for this usage - ideally using enhanced AI to manage these complex traffic patterns...and...of course...call it Skynet.![]()
Something needs to eradicate this human infestation off of the planet after all...All this time we've been blaming Miles Dyson and it was actually your fault ...
My BMW has a similar feature called Drive Recorder. It captures video from up to four cameras and saves them automatically if an accident is detected. Recording can also be initiated by the driver. Unfortunately, the recording length is limited to 20 seconds before and after a triggering event. I also got a dash cam that constantly records video from the front. I think these features have become a necessity with so many bad drivers, hit-and-runs, and insurance scams.The Tesla has 6 (I think) camera angles that are constantly recording and any time you witness something you can press the record button and it automatically takes the last 10 minutes from the bugger and writes it to the memory stick in your glove compartment, all very next level and cool. Even if people do stupid little things I'll still record just to look back and laugh.
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