I despise the giant display touchscreen trend. Having to click through menus to operate basic functions is maybe the dumbest idea ever. I get that cars can do more, and some of the lesser used functions don't need dedicated dash space, but changing the heat/air and operating the radio should always have direct controls. I am shocked to learn that you need click-throughs for wipers in some cars. That seems like it should be illegal. It's basic safety. Wipers, climate, and radio (at least volume control) are things you should be able to do without ever taking your eyes off the road for a moment.
Agreed. My family picked up a '21 Chrysler Pacifica last August. The touchscreen is s huge downgrade from theTown and Country we had before it. Climate control is a separate screen from media. The T&C screen was more basic, 1. Focused on entertainment only 2. Was small enough that a driver could place his/her thumb on thedash aside the screen and use their index finger to quickly, and accurately access any buttons an functions. Now, the screen is so large I feel as though I'm playing darts each time I need to poke accurately at a postage stamp -sized button to change a function. Fortunately, th e van has emergency brake assist. It has saved me from nearly rear-ending the car in front of me while I'd focusef all of my attention on navigating the ergonomically-impaired toch screen.
iot iot IOT IOT IOT IOT IOT IOT get with the program jeez
I complain to my wife about it a lot, because she is a car designer. She does exteriors, not interiors, though. She just shrugs her shoulders and says, "If you hate it now, give it 5 more years." Supposedly the insider trend is that the entire dash will be a curved screen at some point in the self-driving future. Probably a good way for them to serve you ads while you're trying to get from point a to b.
Tesla also updates the UI so you need to relearn the steps and find things that were moved. We had the screen go totally unresponsive, which required a reset. No radio, map, fan, etc. My wife waited a couple of days before I came home from a trip because she was worried the reset might fail and then she'd have no transportation.
"We never seem to have the time or money to do it right, but we can always find the time or money to do it twice." - unnamed Tesla engineer, as quoted by Ed Niedermeyer
Hey Tesla, The devil's in the details, right? One can at least expect as the electric car segment has some reasonable competition, B.S. like this will vanish. My iPhone has never done similar after an update. If it didiit did, I likely would not have an iPhone in my hand.
Zaphod waved a hand and the channel switched again. More gunk musicThe machine was rather difficult to operate. For years radios had been operated by means of pressing buttons and turning dials; then as the technology became more sophisticated the controls were made touch-sensitive—you merely had to brush the panels with your fingers; now all you had to do was wave your hand in the general direction of the components and hope. It saved a lot of muscular expenditure, of course, but meant that you had to sit infuriatingly still if you wanted to keep listening to the same program.
A brief rant on the future of interaction design Touchscreens are shit, have always been shit, will always be shit. Fight me. Know that I am writing from behind a $12k interface with three touchscreens and several hundred buttons.