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Tesla Owners Vote on 7.1 Features & Enhancements

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How it all started…

About three weeks ago, a user over on the Tesla Motors Club forum created a very innocuous thread called “Vote on software features/bugs to fix in 7.1 and beyond”. There was already frustration among some owners that Elon’s tweet, just a week earlier, to invite responses to a similar question, would just get lost in the noise that is inherently Twitter. The majority of owners have always wanted to contribute in software suggestions since not only does it make the experience better for everyone, it’s also a big way to make the car more your own.

You see, to date, there really hasn’t been an active solicitation from Tesla to its owner-base to contribute to the ideas that make it into the next software releases. Sure, you can email service and request something be added, but does that really do anything? Most owners would say “no” since there isn’t any active (or otherwise) feedback from Tesla on if that suggestion is on their software development radar. The one exception that could be argued is the rear-camera backup lines that did eventually make it in 2.5 years later. So for a lot of us, we took the invitation behind the tweet to be a first-of-its-kind open door to do something more than just spouting off 140 characters of randomness into the ether; but where to start?

Enter the aforementioned thread on TMC. A user named Korben went on the popular brainstorming site, Tricider, and got to work. He proceeded to create six areas of interest with regards to Model S and its various parts.

After that was done, he invited the users over on TMC to navigate to the site and start entering their own best ideas for 7.1 improvements. One of the strengths of Tricider is to not only vote on the entries, but also create a dialog in which to argue the merits of each one. Arguments for/against have the ability to sway voting and hopefully, the end result is a well fleshed out idea that has serious interest from the owner-base. As Korben commented,

I do this because I have been through the wringer and feel like this is help they would appreciate. It is really tough being successful and having so many demands and detractors…” and continuing further on, “…Building a method to keep a good handle on what the community wants and helping to do some product management seems like the best help I can render. I love my car and the ideas that Tesla brings to the world.” -Korben

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Having been a Model S owner for just over a year, I myself have been slowly compiling a list of suggestions ever since before I ordered, yet no idea who to tell them to. Within 3hrs, I had my list of 48 items entered into the proper sections alongside Korben’s entries and now all I had to do was wait. By bedtime, half of my items had votes and within 24hrs, most of the rest did as well! Fueled by the encouraging response and seeing others were putting their great ideas in for me to vote/comment on, I attempted to cross-promote the thread both on /r/teslamotors and the teslamotors.com forums. The ideas and the votes just kept steadily coming in and now here we are 3 weeks later with some exciting results to share not only with owners/fans, but also Elon and the rest of Tesla.

Firmware 7.1 Feature Suggestions

Media Player Autopilot Battery & Charging

Navigation User Interface Miscellaneous

There is an open invitation to check out the raw data posted on the original thread, along with links to the closed polls. The thread itself has been viewed nearly 10k times prior to this article. Once we sanitize the data, merge the duplicates, and isolate out the suggestions that require hardware, we’d like to post the interpreted results in a second article. But for now, draw some of your own conclusions.

You are looking at the contribution of almost 300 people casting just under 4,000 votes in only a couple of weeks. Not every person who voted contributed an original idea, nor did they need to. But there are still over 200+ suggestions after the dust settled. Some would cater to a very small subset, while others would affect every driver in the fleet. The sheer interest alone tells us that Model S owners still feel passionately enough to take the time to contribute but also feel Tesla has a lot of opportunity to make the car even better.

But what is Tesla going to do about it?

We knew from the very start that no matter how much data we collected or work we put into the interpretation of the results, the biggest question out of all of this was still, “Why should Tesla care what we are doing?”

Model-X-Firmware-7-Driver-Assistance-SettingsWell, here are the simple facts. There is an implied and stated responsibility from Tesla from the beginning that through software improvements, they want to make the car better for owners as time goes on. And while this process has historically been slow and even sparse at times, Tesla is keeping that promise by continuing those software improvements. All we are asking is to help in being a more active part of that. More importantly though for Tesla, is that owners are the only true marketing arm for them currently.

By actively listening to customer feedback and helping owner’s feel like they have a connection to new features they’ve actually requested, helps keep us enchanted with the car and evangelistic to others. Look at the success of the referral program. You wouldn’t suggest a Model S to someone unless you really liked it yourself. Along those same lines, software features have the ability to make or break sales for potential owners. Tesla needs to not only include the useful features other manufacturers have brought to market first, but also have a unique feature set that is necessary in setting them apart and beyond from competitors. Autopilot in its current advanced form is admittedly a huge part of that. Now we need to address the little things that will continue that momentum.

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But listen, we are still under no delusions that Tesla even cares about this project once they see the results. However, Korben’s experience in software development tells him that having a site like this can be hugely useful when you have a dev team you are trying to prioritize resources with. We believed that Elon’s tweet was motivated in part, by the fact that Autopilot had been released full scale and now there might be some time available to knock out a lot of loose ends for the feature set and the interface.

However, as Korben stated, there is a lot of noise on Twitter and these ideas are VERY close to us as owners. Releasing them out into the noise of Twitter seemed like a waste. Especially once we heard that someone was tweeting they wanted a one-press pizza ordering button on the touchscreen. I mean, we need rain-sensing auto-closing sunroof way before we need one-touch pizza ordering buttons, right?

So… now what?

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Now that we have realized that there are some legitimate ideas and people are actually having dialogue on the pros/cons of them, we talked about how we are going to get this info in front of people that matter. The first step is trying to garner as much attention as possible for owners to investigate and see if these results line up with what they are thinking. If that’s the case, the dialogue that ensues will reflect that. Tesla does monitor social media in general, but they heavily monitor Tesla-centered websites and especially TMC. All we’d like, as those who took the time to participate, is confirmation that Tesla’s development process is in line with what it seems owner’s actually want. Ostensibly, we’ve done a lot of the exploratory research for them already for ideas they might not have had and confirmed owner interest for those items which may have already been on their list.

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And if it turns out in 3-6 months, some of these ideas have trickled into 7.1, then we’d like to knock those things off the list, pat everyone on the back, open up the polls again, and plow forward getting opinions on current ideas still outstanding while infusing some new ideas into the mix. It’s about making the car better for those of us that are owners, but also making the car better for non-owners so that it will be ready when they do join us. Thanks to all who participated in this initial project; the data and the project itself would be nothing without you. And again, stay tuned for the follow-up article here where we will have sanitized the data, merged the duplicates, and isolated out the suggestions that require hardware.

Spoiler: There will be sexy graphs and charts.

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Tesla mobile app shows signs of upcoming FSD subscriptions

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An autonomous Tesla Model 3 in action. (Credit: Tesla)

It appears that Tesla may be preparing to roll out some subscription-based services soon. Based on the observations of a Wales-based Model 3 owner who performed some reverse-engineering on the Tesla mobile app, it seems that the electric car maker has added a new “Subscribe” option beside the “Buy” option within the “Upgrades” tab, at least behind the scenes.

A screenshot of the new option was posted in the r/TeslaMotors subreddit, and while the Tesla owner in question, u/Callump01, admitted that the screenshot looks like something that could be easily fabricated, he did submit proof of his reverse-engineering to the community’s moderators. The moderators of the r/TeslaMotors subreddit confirmed the legitimacy of the Model 3 owner’s work, further suggesting that subscription options may indeed be coming to Tesla owners soon.

Did some reverse engineering on the app and Tesla looks to be preparing for subscriptions? from r/teslamotors

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving suite has been heavily speculated to be offered as a subscription option, similar to the company’s Premium Connectivity feature. And back in April, noted Tesla hacker @greentheonly stated that the company’s vehicles already had the source codes for a pay-as-you-go subscription model. The Tesla hacker suggested then that Tesla would likely release such a feature by the end of the year — something that Elon Musk also suggested in the first-quarter earnings call. “I think we will offer Full Self-Driving as a subscription service, but it will be probably towards the end of this year,” Musk stated.

While the signs for an upcoming FSD subscription option seem to be getting more and more prominent as the year approaches its final quarter, the details for such a feature are still quite slim. Pricing for FSD subscriptions, for example, have not been teased by Elon Musk yet, though he has stated on Twitter that purchasing the suite upfront would be more worth it in the long term. References to the feature in the vehicles’ source code, and now in the Tesla mobile app, also listed no references to pricing.

The idea of FSD subscriptions could prove quite popular among electric car owners, especially since it would allow budget-conscious customers to make the most out of the company’s driver-assist and self-driving systems without committing to the features’ full price. The current price of the Full Self-Driving suite is no joke, after all, being listed at $8,000 on top of a vehicle’s cost. By offering subscriptions to features like Navigate on Autopilot with automatic lane changes, owners could gain access to advanced functions only as they are needed.

Elon Musk, for his part, has explained that ultimately, he still believes that purchasing the Full Self-Driving suite outright provides the most value to customers, as it is an investment that would pay off in the future. “I should say, it will still make sense to buy FSD as an option as in our view, buying FSD is an investment in the future. And we are confident that it is an investment that will pay off to the consumer – to the benefit of the consumer.” Musk said.

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Tesla rolls out speed limit sign recognition and green traffic light alert in new update

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(Credit: u/joeycast and u/Avri54/Reddit)

Tesla has started rolling out update 2020.36 this weekend, introducing a couple of notable new features for its vehicles. While there are only a few handful of vehicles that have reportedly received the update so far, 2020.36 makes it evident that the electric car maker has made some strides in its efforts to refine its driver-assist systems for inner-city driving.

Tesla is currently hard at work developing key features for its Full Self-Driving suite, which should allow vehicles to navigate through inner-city streets without driver input. Tesla’s FSD suite is still a work in progress, though the company has released the initial iterations of key features such Traffic Light and Stop Sign Control, which was introduced last April. Similar to the first release of Navigate on Autopilot, however, the capabilities of Traffic Light and Stop Sign Control were pretty basic during their initial rollout.

2020.36 Showing Speed Limit Signs in Visualization from r/teslamotors

With the release of update 2020.36, Tesla has rolled out some improvements that should allow its vehicles to handle traffic lights better. What’s more, the update also includes a particularly useful feature that enables better recognition of speed limit signs, which should make Autopilot’s speed adjustments better during use. Following are the Release Notes for these two new features.

Green Traffic Light Chime

“A chime will play when the traffic light you are waiting for turns green. If you are waiting behind another car, the chime will play once the car advances unless Traffic-Aware Cruise Control or Autosteer is active. When Traffic Light and Stop Sign Control is activated, a chime will play when you can confirm to proceed through a green traffic light. To enable, tap Controls > Autopilot > Green Traffic Light Chime.

“Note: This chime is only designed as a notification. It is the driver’s responsibility to observe their environment and make decisions accordingly.”

Speed Assist Improvements

“Speed Assist now leverages your car’s cameras to detect speed limit signs to improve the accuracy of speed limit data on local roads. Detected speed limit signs will be displayed in the driving visualization and used to set the associated Speed Limit Warning.

“As usual, to adjust Speed Assist settings, tap Controls > Autopilot > Speed Limit.”

Footage of the new green light chime in action via @NASA8500 on Twitter ✈️ from r/teslamotors


Amidst the rollout of 2020.36’s new features, speculations were abounding among Tesla community members that this update may include the first pieces of the company’s highly-anticipated Autopilot rewrite. Inasmuch as the idea is exciting, however, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has stated that this was not the case. While responding to a Tesla owner who asked if the Autopilot rewrite is in “shadow mode” in 2020.36, Musk responded “Not yet.”

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Tesla rolls out Sirius XM free three-month subscription

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(Credit: Tesla)

Tesla has rolled out a free three-month trial subscription to Sirius XM, in what appears to be the company’s latest push into making its vehicles’ entertainment systems more feature-rich. The new Sirius XM offer will likely be appreciated by owners of the company’s vehicles, especially considering that the service is among the most popular satellite radios in the country today.

Tesla announced its new offer in an email sent on Monday. An image that accompanied the communication also teased Tesla’s updated and optimized Sirius XM UI for its vehicles. Following is the email’s text.

“Beginning now, enjoy a free, All Access three-month trial subscription to Sirius XM, plus a completely new look and improved functionality. Our latest over-the-air software update includes significant improvements to overall Sirius XM navigation, organization, and search features, including access to more than 150 satellite channels.

“To access simply tap the Sirius XM app from the ‘Music’ section of your in-car center touchscreen—or enjoy your subscription online, on your phone, or at home on connected devices. If you can’t hear SiriusXM channels in your car, select the Sirius XM ‘Subscription’ tab for instruction on how to refresh your audio.”

Tesla has actually been working on Sirius XM improvements for some time now. Back in June, for example, Tesla rolled out its 2020.24.6.4 update, and it included some optimizations to its Model S and Model X’s Sirius XM interface. As noted by noted Tesla owner and hacker @greentheonly, the source code of this update revealed that the Sirius XM optimizations were also intended to be released to other areas such as Canada.

Interestingly enough, Sirius XM is a popular feature that has been exclusive to the Model S and X. Tesla’s most popular vehicle to date, the Model 3, is yet to receive the feature. One could only hope that Sirius XM integration to the Model 3 may eventually be included in the future. Such an update would most definitely be appreciated by the EV community, especially since some Model 3 owners have resorted to using their smartphones or third-party solutions to gain access to the satellite radio service.

The fact that Tesla seems to be pushing Sirius XM rather assertively to its customers seems to suggest that the company may be poised to roll out more entertainment-based apps in the coming months. Apps such as Sirius XM, Spotify, Netflix, and YouTube, may seem quite minor when compared to key functions like Autopilot, after all, but they do help round out the ownership experience of Tesla owners. In a way, Sirius XM does make sense for Tesla’s next-generation of vehicles, especially the Cybertruck and the Semi, both of which would likely be driven in areas that lack LTE connectivity.

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