That’s not what I heard from my Tesla Fax MachineThere is zero reputable news on a Tesla phone. Zero.
The smartphone was a legacy industry disrupter.In fact the Tesla phone seems like a perfect fit as a legacy industry disruptor.
In 2018, when my wife and I took delivery of our first Model 3's, I was glad we both had Samsung phones because the 'phone as key' function (PAK) worked flawlessly, every time, once we configured our power saving/sleep settings properly, while iPhone users were all having erratic, unreliable performance that was incurable.My last 3 iPhones have lasted 3-5 years, usually I pass them on to family members. My last one is fine, sitting on my nightstand waiting to be boxed up for my daughter after 3 years. I would keep it but I wanted better camera technology. It’s been that way with the iPhone for some years now.
Not panning any other company here, I started using Apple 10 years ago when Android makers were struggling to keep phones on the current rev and haven’t felt the need to switch.
Not sure what you do to phones which makes them last 6-12 months… but that is not normal.
That seems not entirely true, being as say Apple still supports five year old phones.Meanwhile current Samsung and iPhone products are based on a 6-12 month replacement plan, which serves the manufacturer, not the end user.
Works well. Not sure about 100%, but 99% for sure. Enough that I’m not sure where my keycard is right now.Did Apple ever get their iPhones to function 100% with PAK?
So much so that all the recent Tesla features went to iPhone first.Works well. Not sure about 100%, but 99% for sure. Enough that I’m not sure where my keycard is right now.Did Apple ever get their iPhones to function 100% with PAK?
Tesla alternates phone app updates between iPhone and Android. Always have. On the latest update, Android was not far behind, but I imagine some impatient people felt like it took forever!So much so that all the recent Tesla features went to iPhone first.
-Crissa