- Thread starter
- #16
Did I blame the car in my post? Are you sure you read correctly what I was trying to convey? Re-read it again and watch the comparison videos with other brands.I’m sorry guys but why is Ford responsible for a driver falling asleep? You are blaming the wrong entity.
The OP admitted blame and then blames the vehi Lee for keeping him on the road. In the old days he’s go off the road and die a horrible death.
Good grief. What about personal responsibility?
Sorry to be Debbie downer but Come on!
Bob
My point is that when a manager or advert offers you extra paid features, they present it as a system to help the driver stay awake or prevent consequences. In reality it's just a message on the screen with no action. Why don't adverts and car sales present this feature as: if you fall asleep, we'll let you know on the screen, but nothing else will happen. Would anyone be interested in such an option?
Imagine a situation where you buy a new home and they tell you: we have a great anti-theft feature. Protect your home from thieves for $999. You buy this service, and when you get home you find your house has been burglarized and the alarm screen says - your house has been burglarized, call the police! A system that doesn't call the police, doesn't try to call your phone to report a break-in, doesn't set off the siren when a break-in occurs, but simply writes on the screen when you enter your home - “your home has been burglarized”. You want to tell people who have the same alarm system at home. But they'll say: are you trying to blame the sensor on the door for the burglary? You should have hired a security guard, good thing you weren't home, you probably would have been killed in the robbery.
In this thread I want to discuss how the “driver sleeps” option works, but so far I don't see it working. Is it really impossible in 2025 to make a car honk to wake up the driver?
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