I took delivery of my Tesla Model 3 in August of 2018. Most cars just get older with wear, but Teslas improve in some ways with age. It comes with over-the-air firmware updates. This post details some of the improvements to my car since I got it.
- Around the time I got my car, Consumer Reports downrated the Model 3 for its long stopping distance. Tesla sent an update that improved it. CR stated that it was the first time that they had ever encountered a car improve track performance without anyone touching the car.
- Improved range
- Improved acceleration
- Dash cam
- Save Dash cam video on Honk
- New software-update controls
- Priority setting for Bluetooth devices
- Voice keyboard
- Stardew Valley video game
- Chess
- Backgammon
- Classic arcade games
- Cuphead game
- Support for 250 kW charging
- Activate side cameras
- Camp Mode (facilitates sleeping in the car)
- Dog Mode (keeps AC on for pet and displays message for passers by with inside temperature reading)
- Joe Mode (reduces volume of vehicle notices so as not wake kids)
- Romance Mode (displays fireplace and plays romantic music)
- Smart summon (car will pick you up in a parking lot with no driver)
- Navigate on Autopilot (automatically change lanes to pass slower traffic, follow the route, exit and merge)
- More voice commands
- Stop sign warnings
- Dash cam viewer in car
- Traffic light and stop sign control (automatically stops)
- Fallout Shelter Game
- Beach Buggy Racing 2 game
- Tesla Theater (Netflix, Hulu, YouTube, Disney+, Twitch)
- Slacker streaming service
- Cabin camera activation
- Object aware acceleration (reduces how hard the car hits your garage door if you try to plow into it)
- Battery preconditioning for faster charging when routing to a Supercharger
- Option to disable walk-away door locks at home
- Sentry mode
- Range display options
- App can send notices if doors/trunks/windows left open
- Open and close windows from the app (NHTSA said no to closing the windows, so the closing feature was removed)
- Green traffic light chime
- Can read speed limit signs (previously relied on maps)
- Glovebox PIN
- Cat Quest game
- Battle of Polytopia game
- Solitaire
- Voice text messaging
- Emergency Lane Departure Avoidance feature
- Animal visualizations
- Cold weather improvements including increased regenerative braking
- Carioke
- Updated and improved web browser
- Sky Force reloaded game
- Detection of emergency vehicles
- Car wash mode
- Mirror auto dim
- Immersive sound
- Request Full Self-Driving Beta
- Safety score
- Full Self-Driving Beta 10 (and several subsequent releases)
- Display blind spot camera on screen with activation of turn signal
- Sonic the Hedgehog, Sudoku
- Christmas light show (all models)
- Waypoints in navigation system
- Boom box megaphone (for cars equipped with external speaker)
- Live camera access from the app
- Automatic seat heaters
- Customize app launcher
- Hide map details
- TikTok
- Tidal audio streaming
- Full Self-Driving Beta 11 (and several subsequent releases)
- Open garage door with the app (requires HomeLink option)
- Supercharger occupancy and pricing data display on maps
- Apple Music
- Support Bluetooth game controllers
- Steam game engine (some models only)
- Car handles stop signs, 4-way stops, roundabouts, traffic lights, lane changes and turns on city streets.
- Blind spot camera
- Blind spot warning
- User accessible diagnostic mode, including camera views and battery health
This may not be a complete list, and I didn’t list all the many improvements to existing features, particularly driving visualizations and self-driving. Oh, and as I type this, a new update is installing.
A month after writing this, I was admitted to the Tesla Full Self-Driving Beta program which adds another dimension to driving (or not driving) a Tesla. The car pretty much drives itself at this point (Beta release 10.12.2) with only occasional correction needed from the “driver.”