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 | 2 | 3 
fizzychicken
313 posts

Ultimate Geek




Wellingtondave
156 posts

Master Geek


  #3315539 3-Dec-2024 16:51
Send private message

networkn:

 

Jase2985:

 

It was explained to you by 2 posters in the first few posts, it reflects off multiple objects and causes it to show the incorrect speed. It sometimes happens in the right conditions, but i would suspect it's not very often at all. 

 

 

Your 'suspicion' isn't very scientific.

 

It's a fair question to ask, when not one, but TWO measures to prevent incorrect fines being handed out, are missed, how do we know what is a legitimate or illegitimate fine?

 

It dings the credibility of the process.

 

 

 

 

It's VERY concerning. What if you're a law abiding person in a high performance car? Would the judge laugh your arse out of court when you presented yourself to proclaim innocence?

 

Do drivers now need to have a dashcam with baked in GPS recording and archived for months to show they were not speeding at the time? 

 

Should the Police (NZTA now I presume) also have video footage of the vehicle approaching the detection zone and leaving it? 


MadEngineer
4245 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted

  #3315564 3-Dec-2024 17:41
Send private message

Jase2985:

networkn:


Jase2985:


It was explained to you by 2 posters in the first few posts, it reflects off multiple objects and causes it to show the incorrect speed. It sometimes happens in the right conditions, but i would suspect it's not very often at all. 



Your 'suspicion' isn't very scientific.


It's a fair question to ask, when not one, but TWO measures to prevent incorrect fines being handed out, are missed, how do we know what is a legitimate or illegitimate fine?


It dings the credibility of the process.



why does it need to be scientific? i dont know all the factors involved, so its hard to make a scientific conclusion based on a news article. But based on my experience with the Doppler effect, errors can happen, lots of factors not going into them.


But the failing here is, it shouldn't have gone past the human check point. 



Because we’re geeks. Also because we would need to present science if incorrectly pulled up for it




You're not on Atlantis anymore, Duncan Idaho.

1 | 2 | 3 
View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic





News and reviews »

Logitech G522 Gaming Headset Review
Posted 18-Jun-2025 17:00


Māori Artists Launch Design Collection with Cricut ahead of Matariki Day
Posted 15-Jun-2025 11:19


LG Launches Upgraded webOS Hub With Advanced AI
Posted 15-Jun-2025 11:13


One NZ Satellite IoT goes live for customers
Posted 15-Jun-2025 11:10


Bolt Launches in New Zealand
Posted 11-Jun-2025 00:00


Suunto Run Review
Posted 10-Jun-2025 10:44


Freeview Satellite TV Brings HD Viewing to More New Zealanders
Posted 5-Jun-2025 11:50


HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14-inch Review
Posted 3-Jun-2025 14:40


Flip Phones Are Back as HMD Reimagines an Iconic Style
Posted 30-May-2025 17:06


Hundreds of School Students Receive Laptops Through Spark Partnership With Quadrent's Green Lease
Posted 30-May-2025 16:57


AI Report Reveals Trust Is Key to Unlocking Its Potential in Aotearoa
Posted 30-May-2025 16:55


Galaxy Tab S10 FE Series Brings Intelligent Experiences to the Forefront with Premium, Versatile Design
Posted 30-May-2025 16:14


New OPPO Watch X2 Launches in New Zealand
Posted 29-May-2025 16:08


Synology Premiers a New Lineup of Advanced Data Management Solutions
Posted 29-May-2025 16:04


Dyson Launches Its Slimmest Vaccum Cleaner PencilVac
Posted 29-May-2025 15:50









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.