This is fine. #Rivian
@laird Given the post, it reminds me of a question I've meant to ask: Are there any aftermarket back* mods for newer cars that would rip out the iPad a/o touchscreen and put in a useful, tactile, physical interface?
@drimplausible Almost certainly not in this case. *Everything* depends on the center screen (you can't aim the air vents without it!), and they push out updates every couple weeks with new features. So staying compatible would be a disaster.
@laird @drimplausible The vents? Why would a designer even consider complicating the air vents with several new ways for them to fail?
@foxxtrot @drimplausible On the plus side, it opens up a lot of packaging options because you don't need room for physical controls. The vents are mostly just thin slits, but seem to work well. It also makes *some* things easier, because you can turn individual vents, the floor, the defroster, etc on and off individually. Or, you can if you're not driving or have somehow memorized where everything is on the touchscreen.

@laird @drimplausible Sorry, when you say "the vents" do you mean the target temperature or fan intensity of the AC system? Or do you mean the direction in which said breeze is directed?

Because I thought you meant that you'd aim the air coming out of the vents via the touchscreen, but with this reply, I'm not sure about that.

@foxxtrot @drimplausible all of the above. The temperature, the fan speed, and the direction. You can literally drag the vent icon on the screen and the car changes vanes inside the vents and changes the air direction to match.

The turn signals, brakes, and accelerator pedal are probably the only direct controls in the car. The wipers, headlights, and "shifter" have knobs and buttons, but they're mostly just UI shortcuts.

@foxxtrot @drimplausible surprisingly, it seems to all work well. Most things default to "auto" (wipers, lights, heat) and actually work.

At least touchscreens are discoverable. We had a 2000 Passat where there were multiple stalks on each side of the wheel, controlling different things when moved front/back vs up/down, and some had buttons and sliders on the stalks. You could do everything without looking at the controls, but not without looking at the manual.