Saturday, October 24, 2015

External vs. Internal Risk: or, Why People Who Are Afraid to Fly Still Ride in Cars.

I don't understand the dilemma some people see with self-driving cars.

Go ahead and read the article. It's OK, I'll wait....

Many people seem to expect a computer to solve every problem before we can let it make decisions that involve risk to human health or life. What we really should be aiming for is for the computer to do significantly better than a person would do *in the exact same situation*...and let's face it, we're already there just because a computer has a MUCH faster reaction time. The real issue is how to allow it to make even extremely low risk decisions.

The article discusses whether risking the life of the driver would be considered acceptable. Considering how much you can lower the risk to life for auto occupants when 1) occupants are wearing seat belts, 2) they are protected by airbags, and, most importantly 3) the car is driven at a safe speed for road conditions, which includes slowing down when visibility is impeded, the risk to occupants is incredibly low, because that last item requires by definition that the car be driven at a speed at which an accident is almost always avoidable.

Unfortunately, because we drive so often and accidents are so few and far between for the majority of people, we've come to see some risk as acceptable in order to save a few seconds here and a few minutes there. But with self-driving cars we may have to reevaluate that calculation, because people see a higher risk that they bring upon themselves (internal risk) as more acceptable than a lower risk that they cannot control (external risk). For example, that's a major reason that there are plenty of people who are scared to fly but are not afraid to drive, even though the latter is much more risky.

Until we can recognize and try to overcome that inaccurate, emotional evaluation of risk, we can't act completely rationally with regard to health and safety risks.

What do you think?

Monday, February 09, 2015

The Post In Which I Decide That An Essay Is Not Always Required; or, how to get your phone to connect to the wifi at Starbucks.

So, yeah, it's been a while. I have many Weighty Things about which I'd like to write, but these require a lot of Heavy Thought, which of course means a metric fuckton of editing and revising, even after I get it all down on paper.

Sitting here in Starbucks, it occurs to me that maybe, just maybe, I should post whatever's on my mind, whether it's a Deep Thought or not. I'm not exactly going to go for quantity over quality, but as I am fond of saying about many things, I'm going to stop letting the perfect be a barrier to the possible or even the perfectly fine.

So, today's post:

Why won't my phone connect to the wifi at Starbucks?

I've got my laptop and my phone here, and my laptop connected just fine with a popup window, but my phone kept saying "data connection not available" when I tried to update the weather in my weather app, and the proxy window would not come up in Chrome. I tried forgetting the connection, diddling with other settings, but it was actually much simpler.

Chrome would not bring up the proxy login window to log me in to Starbucks, so I went to the stock browser. (T-Mobile Samsung Galaxy S5, or SM-G900T.) Bingo! That's it. I clicked "Accept" there, and everything else worked.

As usual, YMMV, but I can see that this might be an issue on many phones, as many like to always consider their stock browser the only browser for some core tasks, even if you set it as the default.