These concepts can cause some to be wary, but they are an integrated part of today's vehicles, especially the EV world. I doubt Ford will go as far as Tesla, and that is likely a bad thing, but software updates are truly a good thing. Tesla pushes one every 6 weeks or so as they tweak and improve (and sometimes change the GUI - and that isn't always better.)
However as miles are put on the trucks and feedback gets back to Ford they will be able to tweak and adjust power and the BMS for controlling the charging. They can change the charge curve as they understand how millions of charges affect the battery vs the thousands they've been able to test up to now. As they understand and learn more about the heat generated they can update range, etc. It is a good thing and will be required I'm sure. If you ever have a service issue the first thing they will do is make sure your software is up to date.
I won't even be able to remember a small part of the list, but since the Model 3 hit the road, Tesla added a built in camera recorder. Pop a USB drive into the USB port and the cameras will record when someone gets too near the car. Google the number of people that have been caught keying a Tesla from this feature alone.
Just in the last couple of months they have now added viewing your cars camera remotely from the phone app. Yep - you get a trigger of an alarm - you can view the cameras within a few seconds from your phone.
There have been many app updates. At one time you could just see your car was charging. With updates you can now control the number of amps it is currently charging at, adjust on the fly. Fully control the AC and all seat heaters, See and view any SW updates and trigger them from the phone. You can completely schedule service through the app and if your car has detected a problem - say a 12 v battery problem, it can send the code to Tesla and set up your initial appointment for service.
From the phone you can view the car on a live map. You can limit the speed and set a valet code too. Some of these have been available since day 1, but many have been added. Lets just say software updates can and should continue to add value over time. You'll need to learn to embrace them up front. I'm just hopeful Ford is truly learning from the competition and will continue to add a little value by some tweaks and updates along the way vs just letting this thing just become a rotten tomato and give it no love over the years.
However as miles are put on the trucks and feedback gets back to Ford they will be able to tweak and adjust power and the BMS for controlling the charging. They can change the charge curve as they understand how millions of charges affect the battery vs the thousands they've been able to test up to now. As they understand and learn more about the heat generated they can update range, etc. It is a good thing and will be required I'm sure. If you ever have a service issue the first thing they will do is make sure your software is up to date.
I won't even be able to remember a small part of the list, but since the Model 3 hit the road, Tesla added a built in camera recorder. Pop a USB drive into the USB port and the cameras will record when someone gets too near the car. Google the number of people that have been caught keying a Tesla from this feature alone.
Just in the last couple of months they have now added viewing your cars camera remotely from the phone app. Yep - you get a trigger of an alarm - you can view the cameras within a few seconds from your phone.
There have been many app updates. At one time you could just see your car was charging. With updates you can now control the number of amps it is currently charging at, adjust on the fly. Fully control the AC and all seat heaters, See and view any SW updates and trigger them from the phone. You can completely schedule service through the app and if your car has detected a problem - say a 12 v battery problem, it can send the code to Tesla and set up your initial appointment for service.
From the phone you can view the car on a live map. You can limit the speed and set a valet code too. Some of these have been available since day 1, but many have been added. Lets just say software updates can and should continue to add value over time. You'll need to learn to embrace them up front. I'm just hopeful Ford is truly learning from the competition and will continue to add a little value by some tweaks and updates along the way vs just letting this thing just become a rotten tomato and give it no love over the years.