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I’ve held back upgrading, still on 24.8. 36.2 has been pending for a week or so but nothing today so seems to have been pulled, with no alternative being offered.That’s odd. Teslafi showed 1900+ cars waiting download then it dropped to 300+
perhaps the pulled it.
I had noticed the top of my legs getting a cold draught - more than previously. However it concerned me less than the rather excessive swerves and hesitant braking for no reason that I have noticed!Anyone noticed cabin heating is not the same with the latest update?
How so?Anyone noticed cabin heating is not the same with the latest update?
No, mine is sleeping as normalWith 36.2 the car will wake up every 3h for 1 h.
Anyone else?
One thing I have noticed since the 36.2 update is Teslafi occasionally reporting car is offline for long periods.
I can still access it via the App.
It's weird - I don't recall it ever going "offline" before?
The best thing that could happen to Tesla is if Musk needs to sell sufficient stock that a new CEO is appointed. I remember Stelios saying about 'Easy....' that he never liked running companies, but was good at spotting how to disrupt markets and setting up new companies.From the Tesla website:
“your car will be continuously upgraded through over-the-air software updates”.
The last several updates have made my car noticeably worse. When it comes to FSD and AHB I can detect no improvement at all in the last three years. The auto wipers have improved somewhat but are still worse than those on a cheap 10 year old hatch.
This is supposed to be progress?
I actually think the UI has got worse over the years. The update that shrunk the map on the screen was a big retrograde step.For me over the last 4 years of Tesla ownership OTA upgrades have basically been a case of 2 steps forward and 1 step back. But overall I feel the UI is now significantly better than it was 4 years ago (note that I gave up on EAP/FSD after our first Tesla when basic AP became standard). So on that basis I just go with the flow on the updates. I've heard of people in the US refusing to upgrade from their original 2012 software for fear of change! Like a simulation of most ICE cars that never update their original UI, lol.
It's been there a couple of revisions, but has always reverted to 70mph about 100 yards later because the map overrides the sign.Was it this update or a previous one? Suddenly my car is reacting to the overhand gantry signs on M25 and adjusting the speed limit accordingly.
I can see your point regarding M3/Y. But the MS/X UI has improved massively over the last 4 years.I actually think the UI has got worse over the years. The update that shrunk the map on the screen was a big retrograde step.
I embrace change, but not when it makes my car significantly worse. Over the last three years updates have given me small improvements (as well as a load of complete crap) but I’m struggling to see how the day to day driving experience has improved in any meaningful way. In the important aspects my car is just the same as it was three years ago, and this makes it barely different from a 20 year old ICE car.
And true FSD is still a complete pipe dream, at least in this country.
Yes, I still mourn the trip card and hope that the data will return to the main display at some point.The UI has definitely gotten worse. Losing the card widgets in place of a wider driving graphic was a bad decision that still hasn't been rectified. I used the consumption card 100% of the time to monitor my efficiency. Having the Setting menu open (or the Energy app) is not a good replacement. The information shown there is too small and is on the other side of the screen - and blocks the map. I wish Tesla would bring those cards back.
Other things have gotten better - pre-heating the car takes a lot less time than it used to, and uses less battery. Bugs have been fixed - my first Model 3 had a problem where I'd get into the car and everything would hang for a while, the brake pedal would be like a sponge, there would be weird noises and the screen would be unresponsive for up to a minute. I think it was due to time taken to boot up after the car had gone to sleep. My current car has never done that. Being able to watch and delete Dashcam/Sentry Mode videos on the screen instead of having to take out the USB and put it into a PC is a big win. Waypoints, a much requested feature, was added this year. The Tesla mobile app is way better than it was before and is faster to load too.
I think Autopilot has gotten better. No phantom breaking for bridges, less phantom breaking overall - the only time my current car has done it during my period of driving is when a tosspot lorry driver ahead of me decides to go out of his lane. Thanks to European regulations the car is not allowed to do a lane change by itself, so hitting the brakes is the best the car can do unfortunately.
Good summary. For all its quirks I still believe Tesla has the most intuitive UI of any car I've owned/driven. Having said that it's been 4 years since I drove anything else, so maybe things have improved elsewhere?The UI has definitely gotten worse. Losing the card widgets in place of a wider driving graphic was a bad decision that still hasn't been rectified. I used the consumption card 100% of the time to monitor my efficiency. Having the Setting menu open (or the Energy app) is not a good replacement. The information shown there is too small and is on the other side of the screen - and blocks the map. I wish Tesla would bring those cards back.
Other things have gotten better - pre-heating the car takes a lot less time than it used to, and uses less battery. Bugs have been fixed - my first Model 3 had a problem where I'd get into the car and everything would hang for a while, the brake pedal would be like a sponge, there would be weird noises and the screen would be unresponsive for up to a minute. I think it was due to time taken to boot up after the car had gone to sleep. My current car has never done that. Being able to watch and delete Dashcam/Sentry Mode videos on the screen instead of having to take out the USB and put it into a PC is a big win. Waypoints, a much requested feature, was added this year. The Tesla mobile app is way better than it was before and is faster to load too.
I think Autopilot has gotten better. No phantom breaking for bridges, less phantom breaking overall - the only time my current car has done it during my period of driving is when a tosspot lorry driver ahead of me decides to go out of his lane. Thanks to European regulations the car is not allowed to do a lane change by itself, so hitting the brakes is the best the car can do unfortunately.