YeBanKo 2 hours ago

Here is a very interesting thread with owners https://www.4xeforums.com/threads/wrangler-4xe-ota-update-10... Some interesting observations:

    * vehicle loses power while in motion

   * some owners reported not accepting the update, but it still proceeded to update

    * off hours support told them call on Monday

Jeep has been riding on their reputation for while. If you still loyal to this brand, then it’s on you guess.
  • flaminHotSpeedo 2 hours ago

    Out of curiosity, what do you mean by Jeep riding on their reputation?

    Based on everything I've seen and heard, Jeep's reputation is for unreliable vehicles that are increasingly difficult to repair. This seems pretty on-brand for that reputation.

    • freeqaz 2 hours ago

      Recent reputation, yes. But their old reputation was very positive. They made cars that would survive in any condition (which is why they were popular for military uses).

      These days, you're in one of two camps: Either you still believe (because you're ignorant or value the Jeep brand more than you value a reliable vehicle) or you've read the recent reviews and steer clear.

      Jeep has been duking it out for the bottom of Consumer Reports ratings for a while now, yet they still seem to sell cars. As they continue to betray their loyal customer base though, I imagine this will change. I wish American car companies were better!

      • treesknees an hour ago

        I think you’re conflating a few things. Jeeps, as manufactured during World War II, were produced by Ford and Willys. The Jeeps of today, manufactured by Stellantis, carry on the name (and arguably the general shape) but are completely different vehicles.

        They “seem” to sell cars? Well, yes. The Wrangler and the Grand Cherokee are consistently near the top of list of most popular SUVs, year after year.

        • nostrademons an hour ago

          The point of buying the brand is to conflate reputations.

    • nostrademons 2 hours ago

      Depends how old you are. Up through the 80s, Jeep still had a reputation as a rock-solid, durable brand. (The reality probably changed sometime in the 1970s, but it takes time for word to get out.) A lot of people's mental model is set somewhere in their 20s/30s, and they never really update it. So a lot of baby boomers still think of Jeep as a reliable car.

      • grogenaut an hour ago

        Among my dads friends (lawyers) in the 80s none of them would buy a jeep because they consistently died between 60k and 80k miles. one of them had one but he expected to only put 30k on it on his property. We had to pull it with a tractor on multiple hunts because the 4wd system wouldn't work.

donatj an hour ago

My new Honda was very insistent I give it access to my Wi-Fi or share internet with it through my phone. I have declined this request.

Everything currently works fine. I would rather have a working vehicle with potentially outdated software than one that does not work. I have no desire to invite problems where there are none.

gnabgib 5 hours ago

Discussions (270 points, 1 day ago, 286 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45558318

(103 points, 2 hours ago, 69 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45568700

  • araes 22 minutes ago

    This is kind of a meta commentary on this subject, yet something seems wrong with the HN rankings lately.

    The link mentioned has 270 points, and 317 comments, was posted only a day ago, and yet now cannot be found.

    Managed to eventually find it using Hacker News Rankings. Here's the chart. [1]

    [1] Jeep pushed software update ... , https://hnrankings.info/45558318/

    Story rises fast, makes it to number 2, then suddenly begins a rapid fall with no halting all the way down to 299, where it's no longer being tracked. (HN Rankings only tracks to 300)

    There's no mark of a [Dead] story. No comments that the story is not appropriate. Comments appear reasonable and polite. The graph looks like vote manipulation and story burying.