Tesla Model X Owner Has Had Enough Of Minimalism, Adds Physical Buttons::Tesla Model X owner from China has attached a panel of physical buttons to the vehicle’s main control unit for quicker access to some key functions.

      • @[email protected]
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        62 years ago

        At least they have physical buttons below the screen for media, hazards and heated windscreens & seats, plus all the steering wheel controls.

        • Ghostalmedia
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          2 years ago

          For now. The new Volvos are getting what they developed for Polestar. Android Automotive for the head unit platform, which is dope, but even fewer physical buttons on the dash. 😬

          https://techcrunch.com/2023/08/08/the-volvo-ex30s-interior-is-the-ikea-take-on-teslas-playbook/amp/

          My guess is that this will change though. I don’t even see hazards on the dash. I don’t think that’s even legal in a lot of places.

          Edit: also, the current generation setup on Volvos has physical controls for audio, hazards, window defrost, lights, cruise, voice control, seat position, drive mode, and vent orientation. Seat temperature is on the screen next to climate controls.

        • Ghostalmedia
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          112 years ago

          Thing is, I really wanted CarPlay / Android Auto support. Having had that with a 3rd party Alpine deck, I really got used to it. It’s hard to go back.

          But, having some of those controls behind several menus and screens is really annoying. Oh well, at least it’s not a Telsa and I can turn the air vents manually.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 years ago

            I usually just prop my cellphone in front of the car’s screen if I don’t want to bother setting the car’s NAV and I only play two radio stations when I drive so it doesn’t bother me, but I understand what you’re saying (although my experience with Android auto wasn’t great).

            Honestly I just wished the NAV could sync with my phone via Bluetooth even if it used Volvo’s map, that’s all I would need for it to be perfect.

            • Ghostalmedia
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              32 years ago

              I’m mostly in CarPlay land. Personally, I like that the car UIs are much more glanceable, have bigger touch targets that are easier to hit on a bumpy road, and default to voice control UIs for a lot of stuff. All in all, it feels safer to me and helps me keep my eyes on the road.

              But once you get outside of controlling CP and AA for audio, messaging, and mapping apps, and you start talking about controlling the vehicle, I want physical buttons for common stuff.

              My Volvo has some annoying collision detection sensors that I have to toggle off on certain roads, and going through menus to get to that is stupid.

      • @[email protected]
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        82 years ago

        Functional vs pretty… When it comes to something that affects safety I’ll take functional.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          That’s totally fair and everyone has different preferences. But I really don’t think it needs to be a trade off at all. My ‘13 Focus has buttons for everything important in addition to the touch screen controls and they made it look nice too.

          If I’m gonna spend XC60 money, I want the styling to be something I enjoy as much as I enjoy the rest of the car. This console might actually be a deal breaker for me if I were shopping.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        2017 xc60 in my case, it’s not exactly like that (I’ve got a couple of blanks this one doesn’t have) but they still had it up to 2018 in the S60 and V60.

  • @[email protected]
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    2392 years ago

    Anytime I need to click on a touch button / non physical button I need to take my eyes off the road so I don’t click on other buttons wrongly… physical buttons in car is the way !

      • Bo7a
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        72 years ago

        This hits so close to home. I have had multiple experiences where phone-starers pull up so close to my bike while they are not paying attention that my wife could slap their hoods, and once I had a guy pull so close behind at a red light that his bumper was UNDER my rear fender.

        • Techranger
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          52 years ago

          While stopped, keep it in first gear and hold the clutch. Plan an escape path ahead of time and park at a slant if you have to. Using your mirrors, remain vigilant of traffic approaching from behind. Safe rides! 🏍️✌️

    • @[email protected]
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      732 years ago

      I still misclick. It’s so dangerous.

      Back when I was a teen I’d text and drive with T9 on a Nokia without needing to look at anything but the road. Now I have to concerntrate and time bumps to get try turn the demister on.

      Physical buttons are just so much safer and easier since you don’t need take focus off driving.

      I’ve thought about making an APK I can get going through Android Auto that simply converts my requests via LLM to commands for the car. But I imagine getting the manufacturer’s command lists is near impossible and then there’s all the shit blocking an APK permissions to control car components. It would otherwise be super easy.

      • r00ty
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        262 years ago

        I’d be very surprised if they let an APK that wasn’t signed in some way by the manufacturer access any vehicle functions. A rogue app could do silly dangerous things. Wait a second, it’s Tesla and Musk we’re talking about here. No, I’d actually not be surprised upon reflection.

        • eric
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          92 years ago

          I had my rebuttal locked and loaded until those last two sentences. What a ride.

      • LazaroFilm
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        62 years ago

        You could have an ESP32 connected to your phone. The ESP could control some relays or simply raise/lower pins to connect to whatever this physycal board is connected to. You make your own API from there.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        Tesla has an open API, and there are several apps and different types of hardware that take advantage of it, including Bluetooth hardware buttons.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        What car components would you like to be able to voice command?

        Texting, calling and maps are already in android auto, and those are usually the ones in the car OS too, so I doubt they even have commands for other stuff. Maybe the AC if it’s even connected to the computer.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          The next generation of CarPlay is going to be able to control the AC and integrate with the car enough to take over all the panels. I haven’t seen Siri mentioned but I’m guessing Siri would be able to control it too.

          I don’t really follow android so I don’t know if they have similar in the works.

    • Brave Little Hitachi Wand
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      502 years ago

      I want jackknife switches for every function, all wired to go chokBZAK and throw sparks at me every time I use my turn signal. Mad science maximalist aesthetics.

          • Brave Little Hitachi Wand
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            162 years ago

            I’m imagining a dashboard bristling with these, to control everything from door locks to wipers.

            Maybe a few big red buttons and flashing toggle buttons too, case depending.

            It’d be a horrible experience to drive, which is itself a net benefit.

            • @[email protected]
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              152 years ago

              It takes like 4 switches and a button to get the power into the back to open the trunk, all while you crackle maniacally in the grocery store parking lot. Also it needs to be struck by lightning first.

            • @[email protected]
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              32 years ago

              So, in the future when self driving is a thing, you have most people napping or watching their favorite drama in 2 second clips between 5 second commercials, and then there’s you. Fully entertained you, cackling while randomly flipping hundreds of switches that aren’t quite aligned, each one making a spark on contact and doing something innocuous like changing the color of the interior accent lights.

  • @[email protected]
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    1032 years ago

    (author) "…but it obviously defeats the whole purpose of minimalism. "

    Fucking dumbass, A single button to do one thing IS minimalism. A screen area to many ISNT

  • Curious Canid
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    542 years ago

    This seems like a great idea to me. Touch screens are a terrible way to operate controls while driving. Some car companies have begun backing off from the trend and are moving back to buttons for some functions.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      Touch screens are great for dynamic interfaces, but terrible for anything that involves feedback or a tactile experience.

      My vehicle - though not a Tesla - still pisses me off that all the stereo controls except the power button are touch-based (even power appears to be a software-activated button as it failed once when the unit locked up). The saving point on my vehicle is that the steering controls (volume, prev/next) do still exist as physical buttons.

      At the very least, they’re should be a physical on/off, and physical dials/controls for volume and heating adjustments so a driver can change those without taking eyes off the road.

    • @[email protected]
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      142 years ago

      Programming your Tesla would mean that you upload software that your car runs. I think you can’t do that, but you should be allowed to.

      As it’s a matter of public safety, and as part of a right to repair, all of the software that runs in cars should be open source, and should be able to be updated by the owner.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        Do you really think the average Joe has the knowledge to develop safe software for a car? Some things are okay to be proprietary imo, maybe with open documentation but not source.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            If the non-critical parts were scriptable like the infotainment system, then I could get behind it. Kind of like android I guess where you’re free to tinker, but you have to enable developer mode first so regular people can’t accidentally break something.

      • @[email protected]
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        122 years ago

        This is a terrible idea. What stops me from uploading a broken piece of shit fork that puts others at risk while I’m driving?

        • @[email protected]
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          62 years ago

          The law stops you. Open source just means that you can access the code and modify it. Open source does not mean that you have automatically met the legal requirements to certify that software for use on public roads. That would be an additional hurdle that any automotive software would have to pass. But, most legal systems are stone age compared to software development and any sufficiently new technology. Still, right to repair and open source does not mean that you can operate outside of regulations.

          • PaintedSnail
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            22 years ago

            I believe the issue isn’t one of laws, but enforcement. If a person is physically capable of modifying the code their cars runs and then operating it on a public road, then someone will, illegal or not. That is what puts the lives of others at risk. Hell, I can already imagine websites where you can download untested mods to apply to cars that people will apply with no knowledge of how it works.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          The same thing that prevents you from putting in a piece of shit knockoff part that puts others at risk while you’re driving?

          You’re desire to not die.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          A script is a type of software, so that’s not really a big difference.

          I don’t know about Tesla specifically, but if I was making a car that was intended to be moddable like this, I would have a hardware interface of some sort, and expect the mod to call a public API. This is similar to how cell phones can connect via USB and have some functionality.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      No but you can tap into and send signals over the CAN bus. I believe that’s how it works. They’re not the first to add controls.

  • LegionEris [she/her]
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    662 years ago

    Ngl I want my dash to look like a fucking airliner. I love that my MINI interior looks like a personal space ship from a 90s movie. Give me moar toggles!

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      I want everything to be toggle switches. If I could get a keyboard made of 105 classic toggle switches it would be worth the effort to type with it.

      • Krzd
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        12 years ago

        The question is, do you want them to toggle ‘on’ and ‘off’, meaning switching them on is like holding down the key, or send impulses in each position? (obviously with a master switch to reset then without triggering something)

  • @[email protected]
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    42 years ago

    I still think it’s theoretically possible to do a touch interface right… but nobody has figured it out yet. Any interaction that requires you to navigate between multiple menus while driving is doing it wrong, but if you could get all the relevant buttons on screen, in predictable enough locations that people can click them while driving, it could work….

    But at that point I’m not sure there’s much benefit to the screen vs physical buttons.

  • @[email protected]
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    1172 years ago

    Simce when is a giant computer screen glaring in your face considered minimalism? I would argue the buttons return the car to proper minimalism. So glad to see this! Can we just yank all of those screens out of future vehicles?

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      This aesthetic minimalism and there’s minimalism as lifestyle philosophy. Those two are not related and often contradict each other.

    • @[email protected]
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      322 years ago

      I dont think removing the screen complete is the right way around this. Having something that can display maps and more information is good. But it should have never become the only thing.

      You need buttons and easy access to functions that are always available in easy to remember places. So that you aren’t spending attention away from the road when you want to change the fan control.

      Fuck this bullshit touchscreen only nonsense, actual physical buttons are superior in a car.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Personally I think a good tactile display could fix this but I would prefer a voice control that really works more than any buttons. I’ve heard Teslas voice control is pretty good, but I have yet to be satisfied with any automobile voice control.

      • @[email protected]
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        162 years ago

        As somone that lives in a dark sky rural area, the computer screen totally distracts and prevents your eyes from seeing the road where there are no streetlights. It is like driving with someone pointing a flashlight in your eyes that you can’t turn down.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 years ago

          Agreed. The screen should be an OLED so the blacks are actually off, and overall dim solely using easier colors at night, low intensity red hues are proven in Astronomy to not screw with your vision, for instance.

          One of the first things I changed on my TLX when I got it was getting rid of the “blue everything” setting on the screens and going with a red interface and it made a world of difference.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 years ago

            It also does that in teslas, it automatically goes in to “dark mode” so it’s not a large white screen, reduces blue light and dims backlight on the screen when it’s dark outside.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        Physical buttons are better for everything that you want to be able to control without looking at

  • @[email protected]
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    122 years ago

    No doubt in my mind they’ll remove you from the fast charge network if you plug this in the U.S. Even more now as this is making rounds online.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    Honestly surprised that Tesla allowed him to modify his car without charging him a $30,000 fine or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      262 years ago

      Yeah Teslas mostly seem like big integrated bricks of tech that you have to throw out if one part breaks, wouldn’t have expected this level of individual modification was possible. Now they just need to make this an option for everyone!

  • Zoolander
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    2 years ago

    I must be in the minority. I hate loads of physical buttons with a passion. I had to get a rental recently and ordered a Jetta but the only car they had available when I landed was a Mercedes. I was pumped because I figured it’d be nice. I hated it. So many buttons all over the place with little hieroglyphs that meant nothing to me. Trying to find anything was impossible.

    That being said, I never mess with the screen while driving. There’s nothing that I ever need to do that is so important I can’t wait until I hit a light or am in a safe spot, buttons or not.

    Edit: This is so representative of Lemmy… simply having a different opinion or preference gets downvoted. The discussion on here is so much worse than Reddit was.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      I hate loads of physical buttons with a passion.

      I don’t think anyone wants that either. But there can be a balance of physical buttons you use while driving the car and virtual buttons to configure settings and other such things you don’t do often and/or don’t do while driving.

      Things like turning on the headlights and wipers and shifting the vehicle should absolutely have physical controls.

      Things like navigation and traction control should have virtual buttons.

      There can be a balance.

  • @[email protected]
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    92 years ago

    I really want a formula one steering wheel. Give me a bunch of useful and programmable controls right next to my damn fingers.

  • Chris
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    282 years ago

    Minimalism can be nice, but Tesla seems to do this just for cost savings. Didn’t they remove some “important” physical buttons from the steering wheel recently?

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      They removed all the stalks and the center horn button from the S/X and replaced them with capacitive touch buttons on the steering wheel and screen. It’s gone about as well as you might expect.

      • Chris
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        2 years ago

        That seems just fucking dangerous. They are digital I am guessing? As a software engineer I really struggle to trust anything that another engineer can code 😅, at least for things that can kill me.

        • @[email protected]
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          62 years ago

          It absolutely is fucking dangerous, and annoying.

          My Model 3 has both the best and the worst interfaces haha.

          The column shifter I absolutely love because I don’t have to look at it to use it and it doesn’t take up space on my center console.

          The scroll wheels similarly do not require eyes and can be used to control various operations based on context.

          But I also have to take my eyes off the road to adjust the temp, seat/steering heaters, and have to go like 3 menus deep to get to the rear seat heaters (passengers can’t control them). Most notably, headlight and wiper controls only have virtual buttons and are hidden in a menu instead of being readily available on screen.

          There’s the whole “mind of car view” that consumed 1/3 of your screen real estate, and is super cool for the first couple days of driving but after that it’s just a giant waste of space that could be used for these necessary controls.

          I really have a love/hate relationship with this car.