Eh, I disagree to an extent. My concern is it's been close to, if not over, 2 weeks since 2.1.3 has started going out. How big can it be that it's taking this long for the amount of cars actually in customers hands? Are they rolling it out 24 hours a day? During working hours only? No weekends? GT's and Dreams first? West Coast first? Certain VINs? I know no one knows these answers -- that's my point! I think that's part of why folks are getting frustrated by this extended wait. I'm just as guilty.
1 week since 2.1.3. 2.1.2, which leaked two weeks ago, was never “rolled out.” Nobody should have heard about it.
It’s not that it’s too big - and I don’t believe there is a specific ordering; I’m pretty certain it’s random. The reason it may be taking a while is so as not to ship a big update to the entire fleet at once. If there are showstopper emergent issues found, they can be addressed and the update rollout paused while that happens.
Hell, maybe the reason is because so many people (myself included) need seat rehoming done and they don’t want to overwhelm the service centers.
What I’m saying is: it isn’t an extended wait. It’s just a wait.
I have mobile service heading my way tomorrow to take a look at my broken lightbar clip and a few other minor issues, do I dare ask him to update me to 2.1.3?
Sure, if he’s there anyway, ask away. It’s not a taboo, lol. It’s just that if you have no other reason to open a case, you are now wasting everyone else’s time due to impatience.
One final point, to those who already have the update, cut the folks who are still waiting some slack! It's easy to tell others to be patient when you're already enjoying these features.
I do cut them slack; I know impatience. I have ADHD ffs. Everything is urgent. I have an addiction to urgency. Trust me, I get it.
But I also understand when it’s important to exercise patience and not give in to that impulsive urgency, particularly when it negatively affects someone else by contributing to a potentially overwhelming scenario for them.
An analogy: COVID was real, and dangerous. And because hospitals were overwhelmed, doctors, nurses, and the rest were exhausted and miserable. Furthermore, people with other real emergent issues couldn’t get seen quickly, or sometimes at all.
Now imagine if instead of COVID, there was a new elective procedure that made you 10x more beautiful or whatever; except unlike doctors who can turn you away and schedule you later, *especially* in an ER, CS agents literally can’t. It is literally their job to try and solve your problem, no matter how big or small, and make you feel like royalty while doing it. They can’t turn you away in favor of someone else’s blown tire or collision or broken module. They will help you, at the cost of someone else.
(“You” used generally here, not specifically referring to you)