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Telford walking group shares men's life-changing stories in book
Telford walking group shares men's life-changing stories in book

BBC News

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

Telford walking group shares men's life-changing stories in book

A walking group that aims to create a safe space for men to open up about their mental health now operates across the UK and a has launched new Walking & Talking was created by Dan Reid in Telford in 2021, and now has 35 groups across 16 are run by leaders who give other men a space to talk about what they are facing in their day-to-day lives, each walk has meetup times and a start location and people can turn up without book, which comes out on Friday, includes a series of stories from men about how the group changed their lives and had a positive impact. All profit from the book will go towards running the walking Reid said there were no restrictions on those taking part in walks, just an expectation that "you'll listen and be open and honest and you can speak as much or as little about your mental health as you want to".He said: "That lack of expectation and that role-modelling from other people makes men more comfortable to open up." 'Just want to help' He said men who had taken part had said the experience had changed their lives."So many people are isolated now, isolated and lonely, and a lot of guys say to us, oh we build our week around that walk," he said."They know every Tuesday or every Wednesday, they know that they're going to see 10, 11 or 20 people who have had similar experiences and just want to help each other."He said the project had changed his own life in "a huge way""If you'd spoken to me four or five years ago, I wouldn't even speak about my mental health let alone talk about this on a regular basis and run almost 40 groups now around the country, which have an impact on men in the community."It's changed my life in a massive way and in such a positive way as well." Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Ads Popped Up on Drivers' Screens. There May Be More on the Way
Ads Popped Up on Drivers' Screens. There May Be More on the Way

WIRED

time25-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • WIRED

Ads Popped Up on Drivers' Screens. There May Be More on the Way

Feb 25, 2025 7:33 AM When Jeep owners complained ads were appearing while driving, the carmaker said it was a glitch. But as auto makers consider connected car opportunities, in-vehicle selling might be too tempting to ignore. Photo-Illustration: Wired Staff; Getty Images Last week, a Jeep driver turned to Reddit to do what people do best on the site—complain. Every time they hit the brakes on their Jeep, they wrote, a promotion for an extended warranty plan popped up in the center console. 'Press the 'call' button to speak to a specialist,' they say the ad encouraged, welcoming the user to use their Bluetooth connection to complete the upsell then and there. Ads are annoying and occasionally insidious; an ad that repeatedly appears inside one's own car more so. According to other online posts on Reddit and Jeep forums, the issue goes back several years, affecting several models of Jeeps. Stellantis, which owns Jeep, says the repetitive nature of the promotion was a glitch. 'This is an isolated incident affecting fewer than ten vehicles at this time limited to the US,' Dan Reid, a spokesperson for the automaker, wrote in a statement. He acknowledged, though, that Stellantis shows other drivers in-vehicle promotions too. Dodge owners, for example, get an infotainment push after 60 days of purchase offering the 'Dodge Complete Performance Package,' a comprehensive warranty offering.' Stellantis says that, on average, customers receive about two in-vehicle messages annually, containing safety, maintenance, or marketing information. Should ads be showing up inside cars at all? Safety experts have serious questions about the practice. But as automakers continue to explore how to make more money off their increasingly digitized and internet-connected wheels, the temptation to upsell on the center console may be too good to pass up. The Data-Powered Upsell Today's new cars come stuffed with some 1,000 to 3,000 semiconductor chips that help to control and coordinate everything from lowering windows and adjusting mirrors to deploying airbags, enabling collision avoidance systems, pairing phones with center consoles and displays, and coordinating navigation. Add in the internet and drivers' cell phones, and you get an ongoing "conversation" of data between individual cars and the manufacturers that build them. Those manufacturers' vision of the future has been pretty consistent over the past few years, says Mark Wakefield, the global automotive market lead at consulting firm AlixPartners. 'In an ideal world, they've totally blended the mobile phone and different services and apps into a nice, big coherent ecosystem that travels from work to play to home,' he says. It's the perfect platform for advertising, for upselling, and for pushing premium trimmings. As with Jeep's extended warranty offer, many services can show up with just a remote software push. Selling a car is a tight margin business; selling software-enabled features, less so. AlixPartners research estimates the connected vehicle services market will be worth more than $473 million globally this year, accounting for 11 percent of automotive revenue streams. By 2032, it could be worth $1.68 billion—more than a quarter of manufacturers' revenue. Some of these software-related plays have already worked out for automakers. General Motors brought in some $2 billion in revenue last year from OnStar, its subscription-based security and entertainment services division, and executives are sticking with a prediction first made in 2021 that the automaker will eventually make more than $20 billion annually in software-related revenue. Customers have already shown that they're willing to shell out a few bucks for services that heats or cools drivers' cars before they get in, or turn on the garage lights when they get back home. Other software plays have not worked well at all. General Motors settled a lawsuit this year with the US government after allegations it collected, used and sold drivers' data without their consent. Customers were horrified when BMW offered to turn on drivers' seat heaters for a monthly fee. (The subscription was available in a handful of countries, including the UK, Germany, and South Korea.) The automaker discontinued the program after an outcry. These experiences suggest there's a limit to customers' patience for data-enabled auto add-ons, and the advertisements automakers use to promote them. 'The guy in the black turtleneck with the frameless glasses in the design studio still thinks the extended digital environment in the vehicle is going to happen,' says Wakefield. 'The customer service rep probably thinks it's never going to happen.' The question is how long drivers are willing to put up with being trapped in their cars with tiny, digital car salesmen before they all take to Reddit—or buy different vehicles altogether. Driven to Distraction Safety advocates, meanwhile, say any kind of in-car screen pop-up can be dangerous. 'People's attention can be easily pulled by that sort of thing, and it's vitally important that the demands on drivers' attention be kept in check,' says William Wallace, who directs safety advocacy at Consumer Reports. He calls a snafu like Jeep's alleged glitch "unacceptable.' Auto safety research suggests that when messages are sent to a car's infotainment systems, and how long they're displayed, determines whether they're safe, says William Horrey, a technical director with the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. Generally though, 'messages sent during any driving trip can be detrimental to safety as they pull drivers' eyes away from the roadway,' he writes in an email. Even messages that draw drivers' eyes away from the road—and potential road hazards—during a red light can lead to accidents, both because drivers can start driving again with being fully aware of their surroundings, and because research shows that the effects of distraction can linger even seconds after drivers' eyes return to the road. Stellantis didn't respond to questions about promotion messages and road safety. Neither did the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the US' top road safety regulator, though it published guidance more than a decade ago suggesting that displaying images or video unrelated to driving or requiring reading of more than 30 characters of text 'inherently interfere with a driver's ability to safely operate the vehicle.' Nathan Proctor, who follows auto issues as the senior director of US Public Interest Research Group's right to repair campaign, says the Jeep ad snafu points to the need for wider reform in the internet-of-autos sector. 'I think we should have a mandatory internet off switch in cars,' he says. 'What am I getting out of my car being connected to the internet? I get cybersecurity risk, privacy invasion, they can subpoena info from my car.' So far, the switch doesn't exist. Maybe some drivers really want the opportunity to buy a cheaper extended warranty. Proctor says it's far from worth the tradeoff.

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