Comment by Cadwhisker
Comment by Cadwhisker 2 days ago
Now, please do Hyundai (and others). Their in-built map's knowledge of speed limits and the speed sign recognition is so awful that any "speeding" data is guaranteed to be wildly inaccurate.
Comment by Cadwhisker 2 days ago
Now, please do Hyundai (and others). Their in-built map's knowledge of speed limits and the speed sign recognition is so awful that any "speeding" data is guaranteed to be wildly inaccurate.
Some (like the Hyundai) have their own in-built maps and speed limit data (not very accurate in Australia). They can even warn about traffic build-ups because they're "connected".
I drive in a very populous urban area, and the Google Maps/Auto speed limit data is often inaccurate.
Hyundai has a "camera speed limit recognition" system, which can identify road signs and recognise what speed they indicate. That's all well and good, except when it picks up a sign for an off-ramp and thinks it applies to you, or when you pass a large truck/bus with a speed limit sign on the back of it and thinks that's the new speed limit.
On every journey of over 2km, it gets something wrong and sounds a warning tone at you that can't be turned off.
It also reads car park speed signs, which are typically "5", so you often hear a "bong bong bong bong" warning from the car in a car park.
I drove a new Kia as a rental... It just uses Google Auto/Apple equivalent, and just uses Google Maps, no? Or do they also have their own maps app?