Flytrap #2 - Possible NSFW Content and WAW fail , Whiskey Bacon and tamale hootch

Status
Not open for further replies.
Oh3K2.jpg
 
How fucking retarded.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2010/12/drivemecrazy-mobile-app-traffic.html


Did that driver just cut you off? Report him with DriveMeCrazy mobile app
December 13, 2010 | 12:51 pm

Philip Inghelbrecht and other entrepreneurs at the intersection of traffic and technology are giving a new meaning to the phrase "mobile app."

At 6 p.m. Monday, Inghelbrecht is starting the engine of a free iPhone app called DriveMeCrazy, with which drivers can rat out their fellow motorists' bad driving. Drivers can speak the license plate of the offending vehicle into their iPhones.

Inghelbrecht said it's an effort to use "crowdsourcing" to bring greater civility and safety to the nation's roads. And he wanted to broadcast a special alert to the traffic capital of the United State: Los Angeles.

Drivemecrazy.p ng "The AAA Foundation says that aggressive driving behavior is the cause of more than half of the 6 million automobile crashes that occur in the U.S. every year. We believe that bad driving comes from a feeling of motorist anonymity," Inghelbrecht said in an e-mail. "Currently drivers believe only police officers can report them. As a result, there is inadequate 'peer pressure' to avoid aggressive or dangerous driving."

There's a mobile rush for driving apps, Inghelbrecht said. Nokia's Navteq maps division recently bought Trapster, an app with which drivers share information about speed cameras, police checkpoints and road hazards. Navteq, which Nokia bought for $8.1 billion in 2008, offers free navigation on Nokia smart phones to compete with Google's mapping system.

Another mobile app, Waze, was introduced in May and just cruised past 2 million users by providing turn-by-turn directions with information about current traffic and road conditions. It's making GPS more social by relying on users to update maps with real-time data on speed traps, bad accidents and other road conditions. Waze -- based in Silicon Valley and Tel Aviv -- announced last week that it had raised $25 million in a Series B funding.

With DriveMeCrazy, once a driver flags another, he or she can write up a ticket, leave an audio message for the other driver, share the details on Twitter and Facebook and look up the driver's previous record on DriveMeCrazy, Inghelbrecht said.

It has safeguards against "malicious users" who flag people who were not driving recklessly, he said.

DriveMeCrazy also allows drivers to rate one another on how nice they are or on how hot they are. (Inghelbrecht acknowledges that the feature is designed to help DriveMeCrazy stand out in the App Store, but he says it could help people who spend an hour and a half in the car each day make a love connection.) Drivers can send their e-mail addresses, pictures and messages to connect with other drivers.

The DriveMeCrazy website discourages distracted driving: "DriveMeCrazy asks you to please use our app responsibly and obey your local laws. If possible pull over, then flag that cutie or report the driver."

DriveMeCrazy Inc., based in San Francisco, will submit data (but not hotness ratings) to DMVs, insurance companies and local law enforcement agencies, Inghelbrecht said.

State governments are increasingly asking drivers to help enforce traffic laws. The Washington State Department of Transportation has a program called HERO for drivers to report carpool-lane violators.

The California Department of Motor Vehicles, which has its own iPhone app, had not heard of the DriveMeCrazy app, spokeswoman Jan Mendoza said. "I don't even know how they would give us that data or what we would do with it," she said.

Inghelbrecht said that DMVs would probably not make use of the technology immediately but that he was confident they would eventually. More important, he thinks the data could one day help set insurance premiums.

Insurance companies currently buy DMV records to check driving records, Inghelbrecht said. They also weigh other criteria that may or may not be relevant, he contended.

"Today, insurance companies use proxy data that often places consumers in the wrong category of risk," he said in an e-mail. "Someone's marital status, education level, homeownership and credit score do not directly speak to how well that person drives. DriveMeCrazy can provide real data on drivers' behavior on the road as observed by fellow motorists and not readily available from any other source."

DriveMeCrazy plans to sell the data to insurance companies. The app "not only addresses a major consumer pain, from a commercial point of view and business model, it's potent," Inghelbrecht said.

DriveMeCrazy is working on an Android app and eventually hopes to "integrate directly with the vehicle," Inghelbrecht said. He is betting the apps will be popular with consumers. The iPhone app was tested over the last few months by a few hundred users, he said.

"To me, it's weird that this hasn't existed yet. Driving is so integral to what we do every day," Inghelbrecht said. "I hope DriveMeCrazy can bring about some small change."
 
Status
Not open for further replies.