On 30/10/13 23:31, Chris wrote:
I know. A lot of people are like that. But who (mis)guides them? The big PR
campaigns by big companies who talk about "safety" and "precision" and give
users a false sense of security. Now that I think of it, maybe the fact that
they don't have a simple mechanical backup is not because of the engineering
culture. Maybe it is to do with the fact that a product might seem less
attractive, if the company admits that it can fail by including a backup 
mechanism.

I'll play devil's advocate here, if nothing else because I'm curious what Walter's response may be ... :-)

One of the things that makes a car different from an aeroplane is that pilots form a relatively small group of highly-trained people. Car drivers get trained, but not to a very high level.

So, in those circumstances, any control you put in the vehicle needs to be confronted with at least four questions -- "What are the expected benefits if this control needs to be used and is used correctly?" "What are the expected problems if this control doesn't need to be used, but is used anyway?" "What's the likelihood of a situation arising where the control needs to be used?" "What's the likelihood that the driver can correctly distinguish when it needs to be used -- what are the expected false positives and false negatives?"

The point being that a manual override in the hands of the average driver could in fact _increase_ the risk of an accident because the most typical outcome is a driver engaging it incorrectly.

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