Navigating Cell Phone Bans

Nov. 5, 2001 -- This week's Cybershake looks at aids that help New York drivers talk on cell phones without violating a new law, a new survey that shows Internet users are socially active, and technology to help rescure workers.

Navigating the Ban on Cell Phones and Driving

On Nov. 1, New York became the first state in the nation to ban hand-held cell phone use while driving. But that doesn't mean drivers can't use their phones in their cars.

"What the law states is that you cannot hold a cell phone up to your ear while you're driving," says Kathleen Dunleavy of Sprint PCS.

She says most cell phone companies are offering free devices that will comply with the law. "It can be either a small ear bud or ear mike, as they're sometimes called," says Dunleavy. "Or it can be a more elaborate hands-free accessory similar to [the] kind of [headset microphone] Madonna [wears] on stage."

Although the New York state law does not prohibit dialing while driving, pending legislation in some other states may ban that as well. Dunleavy says that in those instances, voice-dialing may be key.

"You only have to press 'star,' 'talk' and then say the number that you want to call — or say the name if you've already entered it — and the phone will automatically dial the number associated with that person," says Dunleavy.

— Larry Jacobs, ABCNEWS

The Internet as Community Center

Critics of the Internet say surfing the Web is for loners and that it may encourage a sense of isolation. But the latest results from a new survey suggest otherwise.

John Horrigan of the Pew Internet Project says a new poll of more than 2,000 Americans finds that more than eight in 10 online users have become members of online groups related to their work, hobbies or spiritual life. "It shows the network of networks really has become a collection of communities," he says.

"People are using e-mail lists and online groups to supplement their spiritual experience beyond just going to a service once a week," says Horrigan, who believes that the Internet helps provide the social glue to bring Amercians closer together.

After the tragic attacks on Sept. 11, Horrigan says, "About a third of the Internet users [polled] said they went to some kind of grieving site or online chat room to share their feelings about the attacks."

— Richard Davies, ABCNEWS

High-Tech Help for Rescuers

Firefighters are getting some increasingly high-tech tools to perform their lifesaving tasks.

One important tool used in the days immediately after the attacks on the World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon was the Searchcam. It's a robotic camera with a microphone that can enter the many small crevices created by rubble of wrecked buildings to look for survivors.

"Before, we had to stick our whole head or body in with a flashlight to look around," says Ed Teal of the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue in Virginia. "We stick the camera in, we look on either side to make sure it's safe to remove [the rubble] or cut through it."

The rescuer wears a monitor and can listen for anyone who may be alive. "There could be a person right behind it who is unconscious or deceased," says Teal. "But it let us know what it directly behind [the rubble]."

Another piece of technology is the Viper, a monitor that provides thermal imaging — video pictures based on invisible heat waves. "The thermal imaging gives us the opportunity to see an entire room not only just to find the victims, but to locate the source of the fire also," says Lt. Mike Reagan, who also serves with the Fairfax County rescue unit.

— Michael Barr, ABCNEWS

Cybershake is produced for ABCNEWS Radio by Andrea J. Smith.