Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by jefftk 809 days ago
> The UX of most of the basic car functions was much harder to learn than a typical rental car. I'm sure that Tesla's UX quirks start to feel normal after a while, but I had trouble locating basic car functions and had to text with Tesla-owning friends for advice.

This was also my experience: "you'd only know if someone told you or you looked it up, and late at night after a cross country flight with two tired kids while poking at unfamiliar menu options on the dashboard tablet I was pretty frustrated with their minimally discoverable approach" https://www.jefftk.com/p/tesla-model-3-review

3 comments

For me, test driving a Tesla was a very scary experience because of this. They're not intuitive at all, though I'm sure those who own Tesla's are mostly familiar with the quirks.
That was an excellent write up! I am really surprised that the built-in navigation system does not enable you to search for charging + activity. That seems like it ought to be essential!
Thanks!

It's possible that searching for charging+activity is possible and I just didn't find it? But I spent a while looking!

> The major downside of the cruise control was phantom braking. In about 450mi of driving up and down CA 101 I has three false positives, where we suddenly decelerated:

> I was in the rightmost of two lanes and an SUV was parked in the breakdown lane with its hazards on.

Why was this a false positive?? This is what you are supposed to do if you don't get over to the left.

They said it 'suddenly decelerated.' That is NOT what you are supposed to do when a car is in the breakdown lane.