We're not allowed to touch our phone more than 1 tap when we're driving in Michigan.
I just got off of a 3 hour drive and realized I probably broke the law 10 times. I hate voice commands. Does anyone have a strategy for not being a total criminal while also staying entertained and/or productive during long communtes and trips?
Start a playlist/audio book, whatever before you put the car in drive. Then let it play while you drive.
Set your destination before you drive, then hit "go"...and then follow the directions while you drive.
Did you get a text or email? Cool it will still be there when you get done driving. So instead of looking at it, just keep driving.
It's genuinely, seriously, legitimately, honestly, definitively not that hard. Stay off your phone, focus on driving your 2000 lb death machine. People did it for damn near 100 years before touch screen phones were invented. YOU TOO CAN DO IT!
To play devils advocate just a bit--this is objectively reducing folks productivity and quality of life, particularly for folks that aren't privileged to work from hom, live near work, afford to purchase hands free tech, or be child-free etc.. These folks probably already have inequitable quality of live/productivity challenges. Not saying it's a "bad law" or anything, safety is almost definitely worth it, it's just annoying that as usual the measure will most negatively effect more vulnerable people.
It would be fun to quantify productivity loss and quality of life loss vs. gains in safety/public health--i'll look around for statistics.
There is no devils advocating safety of other people for the sake of your personal entertainment. You owning or not owning a phone does not impact whether or not you need to drive to where you are going. You texting or not texting does not influence the need to drive your car. You killing someone because you couldn't be bothered to keep your eyes on the road instead of on your phone is not an acceptable trade off, on any world, under any scenario.
Bluetooth has been standard in cars for almost 20 years depending on the manufacturer, you don't need extra equipment to handle calls that are actually emergencies. I'm not a fan of the law for different reasons, but people need to stop using phones while driving, you don't need to try and up productivity that aggressively.
If the voice commands work. Google made a change to their voice activated music selection that forces you to physically interact with the phone when you ask for music while driving. It is literally the opposite of safe and helpful. I should test if they ever bothered to change it.
Be wealthy enough to own a car with built in infotainment I guess. Meanwhile I'm stuck with my 2000 4 runner and barely functional pioneer radio. Funny how I still see cops writing full length novels on their laptops while driving though.
There's some decent aftermarket infotainment systems with Bluetooth, Android Auto/ Apple Carplay for a few hundred dollars. Some of them come with a microphone for wireless calls.