New Nissan Technology to deter accidents

by jessica.lam | August 6, 2008 at 08:53 am
336 views | 2 Recommendations | 3 comments

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Even if you are the safest driver on the road, you cannot ensure that everyone in their hurtling piece of metal is just as safe. Unpredictability is always present. In light of this fact of life, Nissan has come up with a new technology to minimize the risk factor of unpredictability. If the car detects dangers such as other cars in blind spots, it will direct the car to safety by actively steering.

A car installed with the brake-resistance device would try to deter the driver from changing lanes, for example, if it detected a car zooming up from behind in the motorist's blind spot, Nissan said.

Motorists can still override the deterrence in an emergency but a test drive in a car fitted with the feature on Wednesday prompted the brakes to vibrate when danger was detected -- leaving little doubt about what the car thought was safe.

"Ultimately, we want the driver to have the final control," an engineer said at an annual safety product demonstration at its Oppama facility in Yokosuka, near Tokyo.

Nissan has set a goal of halving fatalities and serious injuries involving its vehicles by 2015, compared with 20 years earlier, and ultimately preventing them all together.

Some Nissan cars already have a safety feature that helps distracted drivers stay inside a lane or keep a safe distance from the car in front with visual and audible warnings as part of what the company describes as a "virtual bumper" concept.

Nissan said it wanted to expand that concept to preventing side and rear collisions, along with the new brake-resistance device that could be introduced in some luxury


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laurenscakedesigns

My brother works for a Nissan dealership so he had me bake a cake for one of their events a couple of months ago.

laurenscakedesigns has contributed a photo to this story.

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JeffHuang

Sounds like a good idea, but I dont like the fact that everything computerized now. Computer often has bugs and errors. Imagine if this technology went haywire, it'll be pretty dangerous.

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emueses

Errare humánum est...

For that reason, there's no way that technology will replace human intervention, as long as we're in charge of creating that technology. (and I don't see that changing ever!) ;-)

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