Looks to me in some parts like a cultural issue again - some countries
have higher thresholds for acceptable legislative interference, others
believe in paternalism as part of a healthy society. Maybe it also
depends on how much of a flying fuck the government gives about the
voters' opinion once the ballot is cast. You make your cross and then
you bear it, we say about elections here... I don't see it anywhere
near the taxpayer's back either way
Cheers
Ecke

2010/5/30 John Sessoms <jsessoms...@nc.rr.com>:
> From: paul stenquist
>>>
>>> .
>>>>
>>>> .My inclination would be a bluetooth device that you could clip
>>>> to the baby seat, and a program that would run on your cell
>>>> phone, or a dedicated device) that would .alert when the sensor
>>>> got out of range.  Likewise, it could alert if the temperature
>>>> got too high, or too low.
>>
>> LIke Ken said, it won't happen without regulation. NASA has tried to
>> get someone to license their device for a number of years now. The
>> numbers aren't large enough to interest investors. I've never been a
>> fan of mandated safety, but I think I can support this.
>>
>>
>
> It was government regulation that made child safety seats mandatory, and it
> was government regulation that set standards for those child safety seats.
>
> Seems to me like those child safety seat regulations need to be updated to
> mandate some kind of warning system built into the seat.
>
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