Mrs J has her regular monitoring appointment at the Edinburgh Eye Pavilion this morning. Today's weather is forecast to be sunshine and frequent showers so I took her up in the car - Becky of course! - The appointment was an early one so we had to travel in the rush hour and it means going right through the middle of town so, Inverlieth Row then up Dundas St, down Hanover St across Princes St, up the, very steep, Mound and across the high street (better known as "the Royal Mile", on past the central library and finally along Lauriston Place to the Eye Pavilion - Listed that just in case anyone's wanting to do a wee Google walk around!
Anyway, through the middle of town and back during rush hour was always going to be "busy" and it was, although not "traffic jam" busy. Spent quite a bit of time in queues at lights though. Being retired I wouldn't normally choose to travel in rush hour so it was a bit of a novelty being able to "people watch" the folk in the cars and vans around me. Plenty of nose picking, smoothing down hair and general scratching, a couple of ladies doing makeup and lots of folk drinking from take away coffee mugs. What's this thing about us all having to have a drink of some sort with us at all times? However by far and away the most disturbing was the number of folk holding and using their mobile phones. Not many, maybe two? actually making a phone call but shed loads of folk texting. They are so obvious. Car stops because the lights have gone to red. You look in your mirror, or at the vehicle alongside, and almost before it stops rolling the hands come off the wheel and drop down into their lap whilst at the same time they look down. Then it's finger action for a few moments and a quick glance up to see if the car in front has moved. This is repeated until they notice the car in front has moved or the car behind toots. The worst this morning was a young woman in a gargantuan SUV behind me who was so intent on texting she didn't notice I had moved and gone through the lights. I think her vehicle was so big that the cars behind couldn't see she had nothing in front of her so hadn't "tooted". By the time I was about 10 car lengths past the lights she still hadn't moved. Where she was stopped there was a bus at the bus stop on her N/S and it was he who gave her a long blast on his horn to "wake her up". Unfortunately by the time she dropped the phone into her lap - or maybe on the floor, I don't know but I could see she'd dropped it - the lights went back to red again so they all missed their "slot".
Then there was the van driver - Rendering, Plastering, Rough casting - in the lane to my left who, every time we came to a halt would grab a large pile of invoices/bills/whatever from the top of his dashboard, examine them for a wee while, throw them back onto the top of the dash and start frantically typing texts with his phone in both hands on the top of the steering wheel in plain view!
Another was a "city gent" in a "posh car" who was coming towards me in very slow moving traffic. He was looking down all the time, never saw him look up as he went past me at about 1.5 to 2 mph - I hope it was an auto box otherwise he was "murdering" his clutch - must have been relying on peripheral vision? again texting on his phone which was down low in his lap. I've been behind people like this before and it's just so frustrating and annoying when you have a standard clutch.
There were other instances but the above gives you a flavour for what I observed. People are just not complying with the law so it needs to be taken out of their hands and mobile phones need to be "neutered" when in cars. Fine to use it for sat nav but texting and making calls just needs to be blocked. I can't believe the clever "Techies" couldn't achieve this and I bet they could make it selective enough that it only blocked the driver's phone? Might cost a few bob to develop the tech but cheaper than killing people?
Anyway, through the middle of town and back during rush hour was always going to be "busy" and it was, although not "traffic jam" busy. Spent quite a bit of time in queues at lights though. Being retired I wouldn't normally choose to travel in rush hour so it was a bit of a novelty being able to "people watch" the folk in the cars and vans around me. Plenty of nose picking, smoothing down hair and general scratching, a couple of ladies doing makeup and lots of folk drinking from take away coffee mugs. What's this thing about us all having to have a drink of some sort with us at all times? However by far and away the most disturbing was the number of folk holding and using their mobile phones. Not many, maybe two? actually making a phone call but shed loads of folk texting. They are so obvious. Car stops because the lights have gone to red. You look in your mirror, or at the vehicle alongside, and almost before it stops rolling the hands come off the wheel and drop down into their lap whilst at the same time they look down. Then it's finger action for a few moments and a quick glance up to see if the car in front has moved. This is repeated until they notice the car in front has moved or the car behind toots. The worst this morning was a young woman in a gargantuan SUV behind me who was so intent on texting she didn't notice I had moved and gone through the lights. I think her vehicle was so big that the cars behind couldn't see she had nothing in front of her so hadn't "tooted". By the time I was about 10 car lengths past the lights she still hadn't moved. Where she was stopped there was a bus at the bus stop on her N/S and it was he who gave her a long blast on his horn to "wake her up". Unfortunately by the time she dropped the phone into her lap - or maybe on the floor, I don't know but I could see she'd dropped it - the lights went back to red again so they all missed their "slot".
Then there was the van driver - Rendering, Plastering, Rough casting - in the lane to my left who, every time we came to a halt would grab a large pile of invoices/bills/whatever from the top of his dashboard, examine them for a wee while, throw them back onto the top of the dash and start frantically typing texts with his phone in both hands on the top of the steering wheel in plain view!
Another was a "city gent" in a "posh car" who was coming towards me in very slow moving traffic. He was looking down all the time, never saw him look up as he went past me at about 1.5 to 2 mph - I hope it was an auto box otherwise he was "murdering" his clutch - must have been relying on peripheral vision? again texting on his phone which was down low in his lap. I've been behind people like this before and it's just so frustrating and annoying when you have a standard clutch.
There were other instances but the above gives you a flavour for what I observed. People are just not complying with the law so it needs to be taken out of their hands and mobile phones need to be "neutered" when in cars. Fine to use it for sat nav but texting and making calls just needs to be blocked. I can't believe the clever "Techies" couldn't achieve this and I bet they could make it selective enough that it only blocked the driver's phone? Might cost a few bob to develop the tech but cheaper than killing people?