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PreventionSafe Strategies for Using Tech Toys in the CarBy Kim Boatman Just because we’re behind the wheel of a car doesn’t mean we leave our tech toys behind these days. We talk. We tap out text messages. We read our email. In a connected society, it’s hard to un-tether ourselves for the length of a commute or the amount of time it takes to shuttle the kids between after-school activities. Sure, distracted drivers are everyone’s pet peeve. But consider these statistics:
Distractions increase the accident rate four-fold, “the same ratio as drinking and driving,’’ says Clarence Ditlow, executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, the consumer activist group founded by Ralph Nader in 1970. Increasingly, it seems, drivers fidgeting with tech gadgets pose a real risk on our roads. A recent spate of tragic fatal auto crashes in the U.S. has been attributed to sending and receiving text messages, particularly among teens. In New York this past June, text messages flew back and forth from a teenager’s cell phone just before she slammed head-on into a truck, killing herself and four other recent high school graduates. So, just what are the safest ways to handle our many tech tools while behind the wheel? Experts offer these tips:
Even though temptation may beckon, it's also important to set a good example for your children -- the future drivers of the world. Show them first-hand how you save emotional or stressful conversations, emails or text messages until you’re off the road. Don't fiddle with your GPS or fuss with the radio until you're safely stopped in a parking lot or at a traffic light. “The road requires our full attention," says Rader, "but now the road has a lot of competition.’’ Kim Boatman is a journalist based in Silicon Valley, Calif. She spent more than 15 years writing about a variety of topics for the San Jose Mercury News. More FeaturesSymantec Security CheckTest your computer's exposure to online security threats and learn how to make your computer more secure. TestSymantec Tools
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