He's clearly never driven a modern vehicle, as half his complaints are safety features that are common on anything past 2015, the rest is the unwillingness to RTFM.
I will agree on one thing though. The lack of a screen in front of you does get annoying.
Manufacturer’s obsession with replacing physical knobs and switches with onscreen controls needs to die. Yes it’s cheaper for them, but not good for driving safety.
Similarly the insistence on sucking data from your phone.
Before driving it for the first time, I wanted to adjust the mirrors. Now, in just about every car I've ever driven there are switches to adjust the mirrors on the door by the driver's side mirror.
Not the Tesla. You have to go through the screen, find "mirrors", choose left and right and use this ball toggle thingy on the steering wheel to make adjustments.
This is the first issue cited. This is neither normal, nor convenient. It's an obvious cost saving measure and is part of the classically cheap low end feel only Tesla can provide.
Side mirrors? Pain in the ass fake iPad app.
Windshield wipers? Pain in the ass fake iPad app.
Odometer? Pain in the ass fake iPad app.
Etc. Etc. It's cheap, it's bad for usability. We all know this is like this to save a few bucks on screen design and UI buttons across the car.
Teslas are a colossal pile of shits. The article mentions problems with newer cars after 9 years ago - and yes, they are all colossal piles of shit too. All new cars are now moving towards demanding you auto update their software and hand over your sex life and location data, and when you do, they lock your car for 24 HOURS to update that shit.
The only answer is to go after cars older than 2010. They run better, way more reliable, last longer, don't spy on you and are way more comfy.
I think you're hitting on a good cost savings measure. Get rid of the panel and make it an iPad app (sold separately and subscription required). I'll add they need to get rid of the steering wheel/pedals and put a USB port. Plug in your favorite Logitech controller (sold separately) and steer with a d-pad.
Personally, I really like the minimalism. The only physical control I've ever missed is for the windscreen wipers. And even there the automatic function has been getting a lot better lately. So yeah, cars are turning into computers. That doesn't just apply to Tesla, they just do it better. And it doesn't just apply to cars either, in case anyone has been living under a rock for the past twenty years and hasn't noticed.
The mirrors are adjustable via the console because driver profiles change their positions automatically along with the steering wheel and seat positions.
Sorry, really new to Lemmy so just checked the reply.
Do you really get the advertised 30mpg on a regular car or does it depend on how fast you accelerate? I've owned so many ICE cars for the last 25 years and the advertised ratings never held truth.
I had my car for 9 months and drove it over 15k miles, only service I needed so far was windshield wiper fluid. Battery seems to be holding fine, I think the warrant is 120k miles.
2 weeks ago I got rear ended by a truck going 50+. I walked out of it but the EMTs couldn't believe I was still walking around after the hit.
What a fucking moron. Teslas are different, that's true. But if you're able to use a smartphone you're able to use a Tesla. Takes a few minutes to familiarise yourself with it and a few hours of driving to really get into the und and outs. Just like with any other car.
With all the ICE cars I've ever had there were functions I could never use because they required memorising some obscure combination of buttons. On a Tesla, everything is just there. Sometimes you need to poke around on the screen for a bit, but at least you find everything.