xponents
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2022
- Messages
- 5,790
- Reaction score
- 3,093
- Location
- Edison, NJ
- Cars
- Kia EV9, future Air?
I literally couldn't open the frunk during my model s test drive, yes even the techy TEENAGER couldnt figure it out on his first try. Literally had to search it up, and once we did we all laughed at it and I quote, "that's useless." A bit off topic, just trying to prove the point.I couldn’t disagree with this more.
Sit any person who has never used a Tesla in a Tesla and ask them to turn on the wipers.
Or heck, put them in the new models with no stalks and ask them to turn on the turn signals.
Tesla’s software is familiar to Tesla drivers. You get used to it after a while. But even I had a tough time finding a lot of features. And I’m pretty open minded to new UX experiences.
Tesla’s user interface is a never ending array of tabs, each containing a long list of switches. They often move items from one tab to another. And often the thing I’m looking for is not in the tab I expect.
When I test drove the Air (and then took mine home after buying) I had zero issues figuring out how to do anything I needed for basic driving. Items that are further buried down in settings tend to be things you set once and then forget.
And the bugs constantly getting mentioned by reviewers are bugs they experienced several versions ago. I know some here still have occasional glitches, but I haven’t had to do any sort of resetting for several months now. My car just works.
I look forward to new features of course. And refinements over time to some of the more limiting bits of the interface. But I would not call my car particularly buggy anymore. Not any more than the Tesla I had before it, or anything I drove prior to that.