Really? Who are they kidding? Most of us have spent several months acting as beta testers (sorry, I meant to say customers), for their flaky, bug-ridden software and they want to now charge us to carry on with the experience. I hope no one signs up for this and to therefore send a message to Seat. Out of interest, what specifically gets switched off if you don’t fork out?Just been looking at this £125 for 1 year £205 for 2 years according to the online store.
Would have to have a look it was a long list. Map updates, online radio, natural voice control and text, remote services like lock and unlock spring to mind. Basically anything that uses the esim would be my guess. Some things could be done via a mobile hot spot others I think will be locked out as the are on seat servers.Really? Who are they kidding? Most of us have spent several months acting as beta testers (sorry, I meant to say customers), for their flaky, bug-ridden software and they want to now charge us to carry on with the experience. I hope no one signs up for this and to therefore send a message to Seat. Out of interest, what specifically gets switched off if you don’t fork out?
I will grab some screen shots tomorrow.That's what I want to know whether they come with life time maps that you update via the USB as VW and Skoda have in mib2 or whether Seat will do the same on mib3 and say sorry you got to pay doing the same dirty. This was the question to be resolved once year 1 freebie runs out.
Well we know mib2 FeCs can be changed so will only be a matter of time if they continue their map nonsense.
Probably a whole new thread but a photograph of the installed against the supported but not installed. Wonder if the M.I.B. collective as I call the have identified them yet @MIB-Wiki ... I have got some photos in a mib 3 Seat but don't know the decode for them as yet. May be it's easy to work them out from mib2. You start off with photos of the brands, cross out the common ones and then that leaves the specific ones by brand.Diving a bit off topic any one got a list of what the FeC and Swap codes relate to if the were to be activated from the engineering menu or is that a whole new thread.
Of these, only online map updates is really useful and, then, it would take quite some time for you to notice that the maps are out of date in your area. I would be more interested in the renewal if it was a "pick and mix" approach. Even so, for those of us who've had the early cars with all their glitches, you would have thought that SEAT would have provided an extra year free as a goodwill gesture.Would have to have a look it was a long list. Map updates, online radio, natural voice control and text, remote services like lock and unlock spring to mind. Basically anything that uses the esim would be my guess. Some things could be done via a mobile hot spot others I think will be locked out as the are on seat servers.
This is interesting. If UK postcodes are such an oddity, why can BMW's work perfectly on their Sat Nav here (I've never had any of the issues that other people have posted about for SEAT) and VAG group cars don't?I see they are discussing the x,y coordinate thing here
Destinations entered as postcodes get translated to x,y coordinates and stored as such. Think UK postcodes are a bolt on by the German company that prepares the Here Maps data for VAG (postcodes being a UK creation, the "postman's walk" with the letter drop off). Here Maps doesn't really store 7/8 character postcodes in it by road attribute, chumped shorter. Always better on the mib2 high which uses Here Maps to tap the address in then you get told whether it's on the left or right of the road based on the house number if digitised. Greater precision if you get a house number in if digitised. Postcodes are allocated "centroids" by the post office and if a bendy road they will be off the road. (Good for off road driving) Probably the UK liking for postcodes produces the idiosyncratic behaviour of showing x,y coordinates in the history and those off road destinations. That's for normal roads where the postcode is shared between addresses for business POIs they may well be stored with full postcode, since that"s a POI. That bar searches both. Here ends the lesson on GIS .
Probably given to the lower 6th form computer club in Germany . They got it correct on the mib2 high. They just need to allocate the postcode to the appropriate road segment and that road segment is stored. Use to look after a GIS system 30 years ago and we used the postcode directory in our deprivation resource allocation work. You cant get the staff now . That's when we were getting more clever.This is interesting. If UK postcodes are such an oddity, why can BMW's work perfectly on their Sat Nav here (I've never had any of the issues that other people have posted about for SEAT) and VAG group cars don't?
The pricing on seat connect is crazy, almost every feature is duplicating what is already done better in android auto/apple carplay;Other than a radio, Android Auto and the actual vehicle settings what use is the whole infotainment system anyway? The satnav is basic and clunky, the online bits are useless fluff and the phone app is a joke - I've seen Chinese knock-off iPhones with better software installed than Seat cars have at the moment.
It's about time that manufacturers started copying the best bits of everyone else's software, like smart phones did ten years ago, instead of reinventing the wheel and ending up with a square block.