Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.


View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic
1 | ... | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | ... | 139
JimmyCorrigan
49 posts

Geek


  #1012420 25-Mar-2014 13:27
Send private message quote this post

thecatsgoolies: For a minute I thought you were talking about me hee hee. Favorite subject of course and just had a discussion with the nearly 16 year old telling me in 2 months time he will be on the road.
I'm filled with dread to be honest. I want him to have professional lessons not to be taught bad habits from his father but instead to learn proper skills. I believe all new drivers should be taught to drive properly. I've never seen such bad and slack driving since I've been here.


The Restricted License test is very strict now. My wife recently passed the test (after holding her learners for 10+ years, long story), and without professional lessons there is no way she would have passed.

I have been driving for 20+ years and if she had sat it based purely on my advice/understanding there would have been multiple points of failure. They are very pedantic about what they want to see and tiny 'errors' will result in automatic failure of the test.

So, while this is encouraging for the future, it obviously has little impact on the 99% of existing drivers!



freitasm
BDFL - Memuneh
79250 posts

Uber Geek

Administrator
ID Verified
Trusted
Geekzone
Lifetime subscriber

  #1012431 25-Mar-2014 13:29
Send private message quote this post

Is there need for people to quote a wall of text? Edited the previous post.





Please support Geekzone by subscribing, or using one of our referral links: Samsung | AliExpress | Wise | Sharesies | Hatch | GoodSyncBackblaze backup


JimmyCorrigan
49 posts

Geek


  #1012445 25-Mar-2014 13:33
Send private message quote this post

freitasm: Is there need for people to quote a wall of text? Edited the previous post.



(Sorry about that - tried to remove a chunk and inadvertantly cut off some of the tags, resulting in a failure-to-post. Then managed to post it all. Not winning.)


jc



Technofreak
6530 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted

  #1012524 25-Mar-2014 14:45
Send private message quote this post

JimmyCorrigan:
The Restricted License test is very strict now. My wife recently passed the test (after holding her learners for 10+ years, long story), and without professional lessons there is no way she would have passed.

I have been driving for 20+ years and if she had sat it based purely on my advice/understanding there would have been multiple points of failure. They are very pedantic about what they want to see and tiny 'errors' will result in automatic failure of the test.

So, while this is encouraging for the future, it obviously has little impact on the 99% of existing drivers!


There seems to be continual murmurings  about pedantic driver testing officers, I don't know how true they are  If they are true I don't agree that pedantic testing will improve driver standards.

I have been involved with pilot training for many years, both preparing pilots for flight tests and assessing them for competency. It isn't realistic to see a perfect performance during a test.

You look at the overall performance and any areas that are not perfect you look at the risk (is it going to cause an accident or injury or just a possible minor incident) and pass or fail accordingly.  Sure there might be some talking points at the debrief but having some areas that are not perfect doesn't mean a fail.

There are people who could pass all the test requirements BUT are still not suitable to hold a licence. They will do everything right on the day and the moment they have their licence will do what suits them.  The right attitude means a hell of a lot.  Someone who might not be perfect technically might still be a much better driver over all.




Sony Xperia XA2 running Sailfish OS. https://sailfishos.org The true independent open source mobile OS 
Samsung Galaxy Tab S6
Dell Inspiron 14z i5


JimmyCorrigan
49 posts

Geek


  #1012534 25-Mar-2014 15:18
Send private message quote this post

Technofreak:

There seems to be continual murmurings  about pedantic driver testing officers, I don't know how true they are  If they are true I don't agree that pedantic testing will improve driver standards.

I have been involved with pilot training for many years, both preparing pilots for flight tests and assessing them for competency. It isn't realistic to see a perfect performance during a test.

You look at the overall performance and any areas that are not perfect you look at the risk (is it going to cause an accident or injury or just a possible minor incident) and pass or fail accordingly.  Sure there might be some talking points at the debrief but having some areas that are not perfect doesn't mean a fail.

There are people who could pass all the test requirements BUT are still not suitable to hold a licence. They will do everything right on the day and the moment they have their licence will do what suits them.  The right attitude means a hell of a lot.  Someone who might not be perfect technically might still be a much better driver over all.




 

Yes, you would think that demonstrating a sufficient level of competence and confidence would be preferable, but I guess that kind of ‘assessing to a standard' is much tougher to control and justify than ticking some boxes.

 

This is exactly why I suspect most experienced drivers would fail the test. It is the largely irrelevant minutiae you don't know about that they will fault you on, not your actual ability.

 

(eg – in the test, if you cut a solid white line changing lanes, it is an automatic fail. I have not seen a road code in years, admittedly, but I would not have thought it was a particularly serious offence!)

jonathan18
7413 posts

Uber Geek

ID Verified
Trusted

  #1012543 25-Mar-2014 15:38
Send private message quote this post

JimmyCorrigan:  Yes, you would think that demonstrating a sufficient level of competence and confidence would be preferable, but I guess that kind of ‘assessing to a standard' is much tougher to control and justify than ticking some boxes. This is exactly why I suspect most experienced drivers would fail the test. It is the largely irrelevant minutiae you don't know about that they will fault you on, not your actual ability. (eg – in the test, if you cut a solid white line changing lanes, it is an automatic fail. I have not seen a road code in years, admittedly, but I would not have thought it was a particularly serious offence!)


I think that most current licence-holders would fail a re-sit on more fundamental issues than the (argubly) pedantic matters you're referring to - it goes back to some of the bigger issues talked about earlier in this thread such as a complete failure to indicate (many drivers think it's optional in many cases, eg coming out of a driveway), apparent inability to indicate correctly on a roundabout, not coming to a stop at a stop sign, failing to turn into the correct lane at an intersection... the list goes on.

All these add up to something quite siginficant, and are evidence of the poor standard of driving in this country.

As somebody who only got around to getting my full licence about three years back (and I took the precaution of getting a single lesson prior to sitting it to ensure I knew the necessary "tricks") I found the hammering home of some of the basics such as checking the mirror regularly and ALWAYS indicating still serve me well today. Not sure if I stick to the "never go over 50km/hr" mantra though!


MikeB4
18435 posts

Uber Geek

ID Verified
Trusted

  #1012553 25-Mar-2014 16:01
Send private message quote this post

jonathan18:
JimmyCorrigan:  Yes, you would think that demonstrating a sufficient level of competence and confidence would be preferable, but I guess that kind of ‘assessing to a standard' is much tougher to control and justify than ticking some boxes. This is exactly why I suspect most experienced drivers would fail the test. It is the largely irrelevant minutiae you don't know about that they will fault you on, not your actual ability. (eg – in the test, if you cut a solid white line changing lanes, it is an automatic fail. I have not seen a road code in years, admittedly, but I would not have thought it was a particularly serious offence!)


I think that most current licence-holders would fail a re-sit on more fundamental issues than the (argubly) pedantic matters you're referring to - it goes back to some of the bigger issues talked about earlier in this thread such as a complete failure to indicate (many drivers think it's optional in many cases, eg coming out of a driveway), apparent inability to indicate correctly on a roundabout, not coming to a stop at a stop sign, failing to turn into the correct lane at an intersection... the list goes on.

All these add up to something quite siginficant, and are evidence of the poor standard of driving in this country.

As somebody who only got around to getting my full licence about three years back (and I took the precaution of getting a single lesson prior to sitting it to ensure I knew the necessary "tricks") I found the hammering home of some of the basics such as checking the mirror regularly and ALWAYS indicating still serve me well today. Not sure if I stick to the "never go over 50km/hr" mantra though!



I see these as being fundamental in why NZ has a bad rep for driving....

1. Aggression.
2. Protection of ones patch on the road and not letting people merge like a zip etc, not giving sufficient space to other road users like cyclists
3. The roads are a play ground.
4. The speed legal maximum limit is a target all must achieve and not a limit given the prevailing circumstances
5. Failure to indicate 
6. Failure to follow the 2 second rule
7. Drink driving
8. Non licenced or under licences drivers.
9. Bus drivers failing  to follow the road code as are cyclists

 
 
 

Cloud spending continues to surge globally, but most organisations haven’t made the changes necessary to maximise the value and cost-efficiency benefits of their cloud investments. Download the whitepaper From Overspend to Advantage now.
freitasm
BDFL - Memuneh
79250 posts

Uber Geek

Administrator
ID Verified
Trusted
Geekzone
Lifetime subscriber

  #1012612 25-Mar-2014 18:09
Send private message quote this post

KiwiNZ: 
4. The speed legal maximum limit is a target all must achieve and not a limit given the prevailing circumstances


This one is a special case though. If you have a three lane motorway, it's sunny, middle of the day, with relatively low traffic, a muppet driving at 80km/h on the fast lane is nothing more than a muppet.

The speed is not a target but there's no reason for people to do less than the marked speed if there are other lanes available.





Please support Geekzone by subscribing, or using one of our referral links: Samsung | AliExpress | Wise | Sharesies | Hatch | GoodSyncBackblaze backup


Buzz Bumble
332 posts

Ultimate Geek
Inactive user


  #1012624 25-Mar-2014 18:29
Send private message quote this post

freitasm: The speed is not a target but there's no reason for people to do less than the marked speed if there are other lanes available.


There's lots of possible reasons - pelting rain, fog, morons in the other lanes not letting you move over (see point 2. above), the "fast lane" being the lane needed to go where you want to go, problems ahead that you can't see but they can, etc., etc.

Technofreak
6530 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted

  #1012626 25-Mar-2014 18:33
Send private message quote this post

Buzz Bumble:
freitasm: The speed is not a target but there's no reason for people to do less than the marked speed if there are other lanes available.


There's lots of possible reasons - pelting rain, fog, morons in the other lanes not letting you move over (see point 2. above), the "fast lane" being the lane needed to go where you want to go, problems ahead that you can't see but they can, etc., etc.


Most often none of those reason apply, they are just morons as Mauricio says.  Notice he also said "if there are other lanes available".




Sony Xperia XA2 running Sailfish OS. https://sailfishos.org The true independent open source mobile OS 
Samsung Galaxy Tab S6
Dell Inspiron 14z i5


freitasm
BDFL - Memuneh
79250 posts

Uber Geek

Administrator
ID Verified
Trusted
Geekzone
Lifetime subscriber

  #1012628 25-Mar-2014 18:37
Send private message quote this post

As above. I put conditions in my post - sunny, midday, available lanes. You tried to negate all those to justify something, but that wasn't my point.





Please support Geekzone by subscribing, or using one of our referral links: Samsung | AliExpress | Wise | Sharesies | Hatch | GoodSyncBackblaze backup


Buzz Bumble
332 posts

Ultimate Geek
Inactive user


  #1012660 25-Mar-2014 19:31
Send private message quote this post

I took them as two separate statements since they were posted as two separate paragraphs.

ubernoob
576 posts

Ultimate Geek

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1012669 25-Mar-2014 19:47
Send private message quote this post

freitasm:
KiwiNZ: 
4. The speed legal maximum limit is a target all must achieve and not a limit given the prevailing circumstances


This one is a special case though. If you have a three lane motorway, it's sunny, middle of the day, with relatively low traffic, a muppet driving at 80km/h on the fast lane is nothing more than a muppet.

The speed is not a target but there's no reason for people to do less than the marked speed if there are other lanes available.



I think it should be a target. As you say, someone travelling at 80 in a 100 zone is just as much a nuisance as someone tailing you trying to do 120. If our speedos were accurate we could all do 100, no-one makes silly overtaking mistakes, no-one holds up traffic.... with the development of "Driverless" vehicles this could all be negated in the near future...but where's the fun in that

MikeB4
18435 posts

Uber Geek

ID Verified
Trusted

  #1012684 25-Mar-2014 19:50
Send private message quote this post

ubernoob:
freitasm:
KiwiNZ: 
4. The speed legal maximum limit is a target all must achieve and not a limit given the prevailing circumstances


This one is a special case though. If you have a three lane motorway, it's sunny, middle of the day, with relatively low traffic, a muppet driving at 80km/h on the fast lane is nothing more than a muppet.

The speed is not a target but there's no reason for people to do less than the marked speed if there are other lanes available.



I think it should be a target. As you say, someone travelling at 80 in a 100 zone is just as much a nuisance as someone tailing you trying to do 120. If our speedos were accurate we could all do 100, no-one makes silly overtaking mistakes, no-one holds up traffic.... with the development of "Driverless" vehicles this could all be negated in the near future...but where's the fun in that


There is often occasions that traveling at 100km/h is not safe, that is why you can get ticketed doing so.

blakamin
4431 posts

Uber Geek
Inactive user


  #1012689 25-Mar-2014 19:56
Send private message quote this post

KiwiNZ:

There is often occasions that traveling at 100km/h is not safe, that is why you can get ticketed doing so.

And you'll probably see that about as often they ticket people doing 70 in a 100 zone.... Road conditions on *most* highways in NZ should allow you to travel with 10km/h of the speed limit unless it's a major downpour or a traffic jam. If you're not doing it because it's spitting rain/cloudy/or you don't "feel safe" you shouldn't be on the road.

1 | ... | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | ... | 139
View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic





News and reviews »

Air New Zealand Starts AI adoption with OpenAI
Posted 24-Jul-2025 16:00


eero Pro 7 Review
Posted 23-Jul-2025 12:07


BeeStation Plus Review
Posted 21-Jul-2025 14:21


eero Unveils New Wi-Fi 7 Products in New Zealand
Posted 21-Jul-2025 00:01


WiZ Introduces HDMI Sync Box and other Light Devices
Posted 20-Jul-2025 17:32


RedShield Enhances DDoS and Bot Attack Protection
Posted 20-Jul-2025 17:26


Seagate Ships 30TB Drives
Posted 17-Jul-2025 11:24


Oclean AirPump A10 Water Flosser Review
Posted 13-Jul-2025 11:05


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7: Raising the Bar for Smartphones
Posted 10-Jul-2025 02:01


Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 Brings New Edge-To-Edge FlexWindow
Posted 10-Jul-2025 02:01


Epson Launches New AM-C550Z WorkForce Enterprise printer
Posted 9-Jul-2025 18:22


Samsung Releases Smart Monitor M9
Posted 9-Jul-2025 17:46


Nearly Half of Older Kiwis Still Write their Passwords on Paper
Posted 9-Jul-2025 08:42


D-Link 4G+ Cat6 Wi-Fi 6 DWR-933M Mobile Hotspot Review
Posted 1-Jul-2025 11:34


Oppo A5 Series Launches With New Levels of Durability
Posted 30-Jun-2025 10:15









Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.