• BCsven
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    8 months ago

    No different than BMW having heated seats but if you want to use them you have to unlock with subscription plan. This way BMW makes one model and consumer has a choice with paymwnt. Intel CPUs have this too now. Company running servers can buy low performing chip, if they want to expand capability then intel sells them a license code to unlock more performance

    • Guntrigger@sopuli.xyz
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      8 months ago

      They’re pushing the limits of this simulation to see how much bullshit we can tolerate. Turns out it’s a LOT.

    • surfrock66@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      If people are ok with that then I guess it will stand, but it’s insane and anti-consumer in my book. A product costs what it costs, based on supply and demand, and if you can’t afford it you don’t buy it. This flimsy premise of “It lowers the bar to entry so users can upgrade later without having to replace!” will never come to fruition, and it’s too slippery of a slope to “put in a quarter to turn on your A/C”.

      • BCsven
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        8 months ago

        Oh I hate it. Like Toyota was offering remote car start but only if you subscribed online, otherwise your remote start button would get blocked by software. They walked it back because of consumer backlash, but not enough consumers complain. Meanwhile Ford pattented a drive home feature so if you miss a car payment it cripples your car, and further non payment the vehicle will drive itself back to the dealership

        • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Toyota was offering remote car start but only if you subscribed online

          That’s different - it relies on having an active cellular connection in the car and older cell towers (5G has improved this dramatically) could only handle a hundred or so active connections at once, so Toyota is absolutely paying a monthly fee to access the cell network. It makes sense to pass that on to the customers who wish to use the feature.

          Those fees have gone down, since not only is 5G much cheaper per customer (for the cell network), everyone switching to 5G has taken the pressure off older wireless protocols so they’re almost never crowded anymore - so they can pretty much have as many cars connected as they want for near zero cost.

          • BCsven
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            8 months ago

            There is no need for access to a cell signal amd a server though, when you wamt to clicl start.from your living room… You can use the same fob tech as lock umlock your car like cars had prior. Or. you can buy after market remote start kits, Toyota waa juat frying to jump on the SaaS bandwagon

        • barsquid@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Imagine telling this to a time traveler from the 20th Century. “You have self-driving cars?” “Yeah, how else will they get back to the dealership when you miss a payment?” LOL fuck this timeline.

    • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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      8 months ago

      Pretty sure BMW ditched the subscription seats plan in the US due to pissing off car shoppers.

      • BCsven
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        8 months ago

        They may have, Toyota ditched their “subscribe monthly to remote start your car” after outrage

    • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      You’re giving more examples of things that aren’t ok. People should have full control over the software on the products they buy, if they did trying to software-lock anything wouldn’t work.

      • BCsven
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        8 months ago

        Oh I know, its absolute shit. My only point was Tesla doing it is not new, it’s how manufacturers have saved costs on making muliple product configurations.