Texting and driving is a menace that is increasingly responsible for car accidents. One in four car accidents is reportedly due to texting while driving, according to a report by law firm Edgar Snyder. Cellphone use, while driving, accounts for 1.6 million crashes globally every year, says the report.
An iPhone that is being used in a car will use Bluetooth and Wifi to figure out if you are driving, and will automatically blank out the phone’s screen so you won’t get any notifications. The same features will be available in Apple Car Play, so that only the entertainment features are accessible on the car’s music system, but the phone remains blank.
Of course, if calls come in, and the phone is connected to the infotainment system via Car Play, you can answer them over the car’s speaker system, without taking your hands off the wheel or eyes off the road.
People who send you text messages will get an automated “I’m driving right now” response, while the driver will not see anything on his phone.
Incidentally, Android Auto already has this feature where it can send automated texts saying “I’m driving right now” when Android phones are paired with the car’s infotainment system.
With all this technology at hand, one still sees drivers preferring not to use them, and instead, use their phones while driving. Nothing is foolproof, really.
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