Nobody really thinks of a car as a computer until it starts acting like one. It unlocks from an app. It gets updates while parked. It remembers routes, phones, settings, payments, sometimes even wh
One of the funniest things about modern cars is how much stuff they can do while most owners are still using maybe 20 percent of it. Not because people are lazy. Mostly because nobody really shows
There was a time when buying a car was simple in one very specific way. What you drove off the lot was what you had. No surprises later. No upgrades showing up out of nowhere. No features quietly chan
The Nissan Sakura still does its job, but standing still is not really an option anymore. With new rivals on the way, this update feels like a quick refresh to keep up Most of the changes are u
Tesla turned over-the-air updates into part of the ownership experience, not just a bonus. This Spring Update 2026 leans into that. It’s one of the fuller seasonal drops, less about big new feat
Long drives don’t usually come with backup plans when things go wrong. If you’re stuck in traffic and can’t pull over, you’re just out of options. Seres thinks that gap is wort
The average car on American roads is now almost 13 years old, which sounds surprising until you think about what a new car costs now. Then it sounds completely logical. A lot of people are h
A lot of people hear “AI is changing the car industry” and assume it means smarter voice assistants, self-driving features, or dashboards that talk too much. But there is a less obvious
A lot of people assume that once someone starts making serious money, the next move is obvious. Bigger house, nicer watch, luxury car in the driveway. But when it comes to cars, that idea falls apa
There was a time when opening your garage door from your car was the simplest thing in the world. Press a button, door goes up. That was it. No apps, no subscriptions, no thinking required.