Toyota linking brakes to navigation system

TinmanMS6

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2012 Subaru WRX
Toyota seems to be doing everything it can to take driving out of the hands of its drivers. Their Lexus brand has been pushing self-parking mechanisms (with varying degrees of success) for several years now. Now the worlds biggest auto seller is tying its brake-assist technology in with satellite navigation technology to make sure its drivers dont fail to stop at intersections.

The system is billed as the first technology in the world that ties the brake system in with satellite navigation. The new system will alert the driver to an upcoming stop sign, and then when it decides the driver has approached at too high a speed or is too close to stop with the currently applied brake force, the computer will take over and stop the vehicle. The stop-sign information is contained in the map data built into the system.

Given the nature of the satellite-based GPS system, inaccuracy can be chased down to within a foot (30cm) on the most high-end systems. For systems more like those installed in cars, however, the inaccuracy can be as much as 50ft (15m), especially when moving in relation to a stationary object. Add in the potential for stop sign locations to change or be converted to stop lights, and the possibility for erroneous brake application seems high enough to make anyone nervous about buying such a system. It certainly wouldnt be the first time a GPS system had led an overly-reliant driver astray.

Toyota claims the system will be smart about the use of the brakes, adjusting them based on both the GPS information and the data taken from a rear-mounted camera. The new system will be launched on new models in Japan in the near future, which would indicate Toyota has done its homework and thinks it can safely bring the technology to market.

As drivers and car enthusiasts, we have to wonder how much this sort of technology will actually help drivers avoid accidents and how much it will instead encourage (even further) decreased attention. After all, why bother paying attention to road signs and intersections if the car will stop you anyway? Thats just time wasted that you could be reading the morning news or applying makeup. Or eating. Or talking on the phone. Or all of the above.
 
Worst. Idea. Ever.

I've got navigation in my Jeep, and I've got a Tom Tom, and neither one is accurate 100% of the time. Inaccurate maps are at fault more often than inaccuracies in the GPS, but sometimes the maps are pretty far off, which could result in disaster in this case.
 
I don't even want my windshield wipers coming on without input from me...I certainly don't want a computer deciding when I need brakes. Until we install rails in the roadways, there's a limit to how much driving a car can do for the owner. Invention for the sake of invention is starting to get rediculous.
 
These electronic nannies are taking away people's responsibilities as drivers. When we ordered our CX-9, they offered us the blindspot monitoring system. I said "Why do I need a computer to tell that there's something there if I can simply look over my shoulder and in my mirror to see what's happening beside/behind me?"

This stuff takes all the pleasure out of driving. That's the first fuse I would pull.
 

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