Yeah, all of the electronic gizmos, with their thousands of lines of required software and endless updates are mostly designed for today's younger generation who grew up with this crap. Bron with their faces buried in screens. Don't get me wrong, I have worked in IT, and with computers, for a number of years of my lengthy career. There is a time and a place for them. Today's cars, and appliances, are a great example of "just because you can, doesn't mean you SHOULD"! Because you can stick a chip or a computer into something, doesn't mean it's always a great idea. As Rosso says, we have lost personal responsibility when it comes to driving. First, with the distractions of cell phones, then NAV and infotainment screens, and now most vehicles require your almost constant attention to ever-growing large screens which distract from the job at hand - DRIVING! Change a channel? Eyes off the road and onto the screen. Change volume, temps, disable Stop/Start, get directions, etc.? Eyes off the road, and onto the screen.
KISS principle!
Then, we have the PSUEDO self-driving cars, like Tesla and GMs, that boast their "self-driving" capabilities, and their tech-enamored youngin' buyers who buy into the BS and hype, who are either too tired, too drunk, or too lazy to drive, climb into them, program in their destination, thinking this techie vehicle will safely know how to get them home, with little or no driver input. CRASH! It will probably be perfected - SOMEDAY, but that day is far from being perfected. Cars still can't always detect a bag blowing in front of it versus a pedestrian, and driving is like a game of chess, where you need to be looking, and thinking, at least 3 or 4 moves ahead - a sequence of "what-ifs" constantly running through your mind and eyes. Right now, "self-driving" cars are more like playing a game of checkers. About the only "tech" I really find useful in my Pat' is hands-free Bluetooth for making/taking phone calls on the road, and I seldom even use that. The one feature on my wife's '21 tech-filled Durango GT Plus is a Voice Command button on the steering wheel, where you press it and can tell her/him you want to change from satellite to FM and what channel to tune to, change cabin temps to 68, lower/raise volume, etc. This, at least, allows you to not have to take your eyes off the road and fiddle with a touch screen just to do simple tasks. But, the downside, besides the initial costs, was having to get like a 10 year/100K extended warranty, because WHEN something breaks, it's BIG $$. The explosion and proliferation for ever-more tech in new vehicles is also adding immensely to the initial costs of them, as well as the added costs and often inabilities to adequately diagnose and fix them.
