• Jagothaciv
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    152 hours ago

    What’s funny to me is there is nothing new in it. It’s trumped up garbage. It still has a chassis and 4 wheels. Nothing new. It’s stuffed with old tech that doesn’t work. These losers are guinea pigs and probably get scammed annually.

  • @Mercuri
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    1 hour ago

    Tesla engineers managers treating it like software. “Ship it and we can patch it in production.”

    • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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      142 hours ago

      You know it’s never the engineers and always the managers even with software, right?

      • @NotMyOldRedditName
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        36 minutes ago

        always the managers even with software

        You know, I want this to be 100% true, but it’s not.

        I’ve been in software development for over a decade and while the managers are definitely high up there on the list of causing problems, I’ve also worked with enough shitty developers that don’t care enough. Then not everyone provides the same level of code review, some people are pretty bad at it and just rubber stamp things, and then a problem gets through.

        • @DerArzt
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          129 minutes ago

          Isn’t this t the manager’s fault that those shitty developers are there as well though?

          • @NotMyOldRedditName
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            114 minutes ago

            Maybe over an extended period of time, but that’s not something people get fired for right away. Also bugs are a fact of life in software, and while some developers may ship more bugs than others, work still needs to get done, and it’s often better to try and train and improve an existing employee than fire them too soon.

      • @Mercuri
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        1 hour ago

        Ah you speak the truth. Fixed.

  • Pennomi
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    5 hours ago

    We gotta stop calling software updates recalls. Yeah I get that it’s fun to bash on the Cybertruck but this isn’t really that interesting.

    Now that sticky accelerator pedal… yikes.

    • @[email protected]
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      323 minutes ago

      There are also plenty of dumb, nearly inconsequential recalls on regular cars too. Including things like “place this warning sticker in your manual”. That’s a recall.

    • @IphtashuFitz
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      253 hours ago

      I’ve had software recalls for Toyotas and Hondas, both of which involved physical recall paperwork and required me to visit a dealer to install the new software.

      Just because a software recall can be remedied over the air it doesn’t make it any less of a recall. As others have said, there’s a legal definition to a recall. They are issued by the NHTSA and require specific legal responses from the manufacturer.

    • aard
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      905 hours ago

      Recall is a legal term for the car industry which includes stuff like reporting obligations. So if the defect meets the severity level of a recall it should be called as such, even if it is ‘just’ a software update. Ambiguous terms for safety violations are dangerous and may cost lives.

      • @XeroxCool
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        254 hours ago

        Rear view cameras have been federally required on passenger vehicles since module year 2018 in the US market. So yeah, regardless of the error, it’s a recall because the result makes the vehicle noncompliant.

      • @[email protected]
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        -73 hours ago

        I can’t imagine the threshold here isn’t different though. If each of these recalls required hardware modifications Tesla would either hide the data or lawyers would be able to argue they weren’t major safety violations. I think it’s a plus that many things can be fixed expediantly with software updates and the threshold to do so is low.

        • @IphtashuFitz
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          61 hour ago

          NHTSA are the ones who investigate safety issues and issue recall notices. Once they have done that then the manufacturer has very specific legal requirements to follow. Hiding data from them would eventually come to light, and that would be very bad. Look at the diesel emissions scandal for one example. Volkswagen payed billions in fines for that, and a dozen or so employees including the CEO have been indicted. A few have pled guilty and been sentenced to jail.

          • @[email protected]
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            116 minutes ago

            That is only one method for recalls. Many (maybe most) of the Tesla recalls have been voluntary and not mandated by the NHTSA

          • ggppjj
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            142 minutes ago

            (Apologies for not otherwise contributing to the discussion, you want “paid” instead of the nautical rope-handling term “payed”.)

    • @bladerunnerspider
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      315 hours ago

      Yeah… But these are multi-ton vehicles and when they crash people die. Unlike when your computer crashes.

      • Pennomi
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        35 hours ago

        I don’t think “the backup camera is a little slow to turn on” is the smoking gun you are looking for though.

        • @Zron
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          273 hours ago

          The Cybertruck has no rear view mirror when the back cover is down.

          So any reversing requires the use of the backup camera.

          The car also accelerates really fast, and weighs 7,000 pounds.

          It’s also an $80,000+ car that was preordered by a lot of people without test driving it. So it’s primary driver is someone who makes risky and impulsive decisions.

          So a really fast, heavy car that can’t see behind it without a reverse camera, driven by impulsive people makes me think the reverse camera should definitely come up really fast.

          • @essteeyou
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            -63 hours ago

            I’m sure it happens even with perfectly functional cameras.

            • @astropenguin5
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              12 hours ago

              Sure, it still happens regardless, it just makes it easier and more likely to happen.

        • MudMan
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          125 hours ago

          I mean… the normal speed for seeing behind your car is the speed of light, so that may come a bit short of expectations.

          In any case, I agree that by itself it’s not a big deal. After the broken windshield wiper, the pieces that fall off and the sticky accelerator one may… you know, infer a pattern. Which, really, is the news here.

      • @IphtashuFitz
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        11 hour ago

        I recall when I bought my first hybrid that the dealer said there were something like 15 different computers controlling things, from the ICE engine to the transmission to the charging of the battery, etc. They weren’t networked together.

        I also once ran afoul of a software bug in the ECU of a Honda CR/V. That’s the embedded system that manages the whole operation of the engine - from fuel injection to timing to emissions etc. As they progress through model years they use different ECUs that require different software. Even though I work in IT, I wouldn’t feel comfortable trying to update it myself, given the different models, firmware revisions, etc. I was more than happy to take that car to a dealer to have them confirm my car had buggy software and to upgrade it to the right new version.

        • @NotMyOldRedditName
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          31 minutes ago

          This is the same problem all the legacy OEM’s are having. The car isn’t a cohesive system, so it’s very hard to update the car the way Tesla does.

          They are getting better at it, and are able to do more things OTA, but I’m not sure anyone is actually at the level Tesla is yet. If I had to guess, I’d think RIvian might be, but I don’t actually know. VW is going to Rivian for software help.

      • Pennomi
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        5 hours ago

        It can be? You literally just download the OTA update and the vehicle installs it from your own home. “Recall” implies that you have to go into the shop but that’s simply not true.

      • femtech
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        55 hours ago

        Some can be, some the manufacturer doesn’t want to risk it so they make you take it into a dealership to update from a USB.

        • @_stranger_
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          24 hours ago

          A Tesla always updates over the air (I suppose unless that’s the part that’s broken). It’s arguably the most important safety feature on a car mostly defined by its software. I have a ten year old chevy that needs a software update, but like you said I’ll need to make an appointment to have someone else download it and manually install that software for me, which sounds super archaic and dumb when it’s spelled out like that.

          • femtech
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            22 hours ago

            Maybe they don’t have an immutable backup firmware and are worried about bricking some part of the car if the update fails, or it’s a hold over from their old car recall process.

            • @_stranger_
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              1 hour ago

              Well, it’s because it’s an old car company doing software, something they’re universally bad at. Legacy car companies being bad at software is why Apple Carplay and Android Auto exist.

  • @ccunning
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    225 hours ago

    You can tell Elon is a genius because he gets people to pay to do prototype testing for him.

    • @_stranger_
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      -44 hours ago

      Software that never gets updated isn’t a good thing. Even the Voyager probes still get software updates.

        • @DasAlbatross
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          32 hours ago

          lol. The guy you were responding to thought you were agreeing with home with this meme.

  • @MrVilliam
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    105 hours ago

    Just dropping a link to the relevant, most recent upload from Some More News aka Cody’s Showdy. TL;DW: the cyber truck is an oversized, overpriced, unreliable, terrible design that’s dangerous to everybody in and around it.

  • @NotMyOldRedditName
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    Okay… so I knew this would be posted here when I saw it, and I knew there’d be a circlejerk of people dumping on Tesla/Elon because oh no a recall! One that can even be fixed with software.

    How many of these other recalls did you see in the past few weeks though since Sept 18th? How many of these landed on the technology sub at that? These are all also EVs (with 1 PHEV)

    VW (100k) - https://electrek.co/2024/09/18/volkswagen-halt-us-id-4-production-100k-vehicle-recall/

    -Door handles leaking causing electrical problem, stop production until 2025

    KIA (12.4k)- https://electrek.co/2024/09/24/kia-recall-12400-ev9-suvs-faulty-remote-parking-assist/

    -Remote parking systems might not stop the car.

    Jeep [PHEV] (194k) - https://apnews.com/article/jeep-recall-park-outdoors-fire-risk-d201d4a90b271da96724f77ec034e459

    -Battery Fire Risk - STOP CHARGE AND PARK OUTSIDE.

    BYD (96.7k) - https://cnevpost.com/2024/09/29/byd-recalls-evs-fire-risk/

    -Fire Risk - Bad capacitor on PCB (not a battery specific issue)

    • @[email protected]
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      127 minutes ago

      Yea those are all shit cars as well. I don’t think many would disagree. It turns out several different cars are shitty.

      • @NotMyOldRedditName
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        15 minutes ago

        What’s a good EV?

        They all have recalls. Very few vehicles have few recalls. Especially early year models.

        • @[email protected]
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          113 minutes ago

          I haven’t bought one yet so I’m probably not the right person to ask. Everyone I know with a Hyundai seems happy, though.

          • @NotMyOldRedditName
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            People do like Hyundai’s EVs and I would definitely check them out when you’re looking, but don’t kid yourself that Hyundai also doesn’t have it’s own issues.

            For example people have been stealing Hyundai/Kia for years now due to faulty security software that makes it trivial. It was even a TikTok challenge.

    • @BassTurd
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      21 hour ago

      Do you know how many of those that you linked have had multiple recalls on them? Clearly some are more significant than a malfunctioning backup camera, but one of the reasons the cyber truck story has more bagging on it is because the number of recalls. It’s a larger indicator, imo, or a poorly made product where the others may be one missed QA or engineering issue, not systemic issues.

    • @NotMyOldRedditName
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      42 minutes ago

      As a second note to my main post - I was tracking these since the VW recall because I read awhile ago that recalls happen in clusters, and someone did a paper on it once (and i actually found the paper back then to confirm). When a company is working through a recall and knows there might be an issue, they’ll often hold onto it for awhile if they can (there’s probably some statutory limit) and wait for someone else to announce a recall. The person who announces the first recall in a cluster will often get more headlines/news and a greater impact on their stock.

      I thought that was interesting when I read it last time and started keeping track on my VW post on the electric vehicles community when I saw the VW one which was the first I’d seen for EVs in awhile and wanted to see how many we’d get clustered together. It’s still going with this new CyberTruck one, but I’m not 100% sure that VW was the first.

  • @breadsmasher
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    135 hours ago

    Tesla? Making shoddy vehicles?

    shockedpicachu.jpeg

  • Jo Miran
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    95 hours ago

    I see Cybertrucks all the time. Everything about it is so ridiculous that I am genuinely embarrassed for the driver. I think it is the scale. If it was the size of a Hyundai Santa Cruz, the aesthetic might work…maybe. It just looks silly, gawdy, unfinished, and cheap.

  • @RunningInRVA
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    5 hours ago

    My new Hyundai did this, sorta, and it also had to be recalled. Shifting into reverse would immediately display the rear view camera (good) but then about 25% of the time it would flash a dialogue box on top of the display with instructions on how to operate the display (bad). You could select “Dismiss” or “Don’t Show This Again”. Selecting “Don’t show This Again” did nothing (worse). With the dialog present you could not see the rear view camera display and if you are one of many drivers with muscle memory, the car was already rolling backwards when you realize you cannot see (unacceptable).

    Elon sucks and I would never buy a Tesla but just adding this as a reference point that software in cars generally sucks.