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R-slurs buy gimmick gadget that's only useful for Spotify, go :marseypikachu2: when Spotify phases it out and bricks it

https://old.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/1czmiaj/unacceptable_spotify_bricking_car_thing_devices/

https://old.reddit.com/r/technews/comments/1cziwve/unacceptable_spotify_bricking_car_thing_devices/

https://old.reddit.com/r/nottheonion/comments/1czblzd/spotify_dropping_support_for_car_thing_suggests/

https://old.reddit.com/r/cars/comments/1czfwwn/spotify_is_about_to_kill_the_car_thing/

The hack sub is full of :marseysneed: too https://old.reddit.com/r/carthinghax/

Orange site

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40465102

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40457867

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40456644


“Unacceptable”: Spotify bricking Car Thing devices in Dec. without refunds

Spotify stopped making Car Things in July 2022 but kept selling them.

Owners of Spotify's soon-to-be-bricked Car Thing device are begging the company to open-source the gadgets to save some the landfill. Spotify hasn't responded to pleas to salvage the hardware, which was originally intended to connect to car dashboards and auxiliary outlets to enable drivers to listen to and navigate Spotify.

Spotify announced today that it's bricking all purchased Car Things on December 9 and not offering refunds or trade-in options. On a support page, Spotify says:

We're discontinuing Car Thing as part of our ongoing efforts to streamline our product offerings. We understand it may be disappointing, but this decision allows us to focus on developing new features and enhancements that will ultimately provide a better experience to all Spotify users.

Spotify has no further guidance for device owners beyond asking them to reset the device to factory settings and “safely” get rid of the bricked gadget by “following local electronic waste guidelines.”

The company also said that it doesn't plan to release a follow-up to the Car Thing.

[article continued]
Early demise

Car Thing came out to limited subscribers in October 2021 before releasing to the general public in February 2022.

In its Q2 2022 earnings report released in July, Spotify revealed that it stopped making Car Things. In a chat with TechCrunch, it cited "several factors, including product demand and supply chain issues." A Spotify rep also told the publication that the devices would continue to “perform as intended,” but that was apparently a temporary situation.

Halted production was a warning sign that Car Thing was in peril. However, at that time, Spotify also cut the device's price from $90 to $50, which could have encouraged people to buy a device that would be useless a few years later.

Car Thing's usefulness was always dubious, though. The device has a 4-inch touchscreen and knob for easy navigation, as well as support for Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and voice control. But it also required users to subscribe to Spotify Premium, which starts at $11 per month. Worse, Car Thing requires a phone using data or Wi-Fi connected via Bluetooth in order to work, making the Thing seem redundant.

In its Q1 2022 report, Spotify said that quitting Car Thing hurt gross margins and that it took a 31 million euro (about $31.4 million at the time) hit on the venture.

Open source pleas

Spotify's announcement has sent some Car Thing owners to online forums to share their disappointment with Spotify and beg the company to open-source the device instead of dooming it for recycling centers at best. As of this writing, there are over 50 posts on the Spotify Community forums showing concern about the discontinuation, with many demanding a refund and/or calling for open-sourcing. There are similar discussions happening elsewhere online, like on Reddit, where users have used phrases like "entirely unnacceptable" to describe the news.

A Spotify Community member going by AaronMickDee, for example, said:

I'd rather not just dispose of the device. I think there is a community that would love the idea of having a device we can customize and use for other uses other than a song playback device.

Would Spotify be willing to maybe unlock the system and allow users to write/flash 3rd party firmware to the device?

A Spotify spokesperson declined to answer Ars' questions about why Car Thing isn't being open-sourced and concerns around e-waste and wasted money.

Instead, a company rep told Ars, in part: “The goal of our Car Thing exploration in the US was to learn more about how people listen in the car. In July 2022, we announced we'd stop further production and now it's time to say goodbye to the devices entirely." I followed up with Spotify's rep to ask again about making the device open source but didn't hear back.

At this point, encouraging customers to waste nearly $100 on a soon-obsolete device hasn't resulted in any groundbreaking innovations or lessons around "how people listen in the car." In their initial response, Spotify's rep pointed me to a Spotify site that searches Spotify's newsroom for "how to listen to Spotify in the car." One of the top posts is from 2019 and states that “if your car has an AUX or USB socket, using a cable is probably one of the fastest ways to connect by using your phone."

As for Spotify, using customer dollars for company-serving learning experiences isn't the best business plan. And for regular users, it's best to avoid investing in an unproven hardware venture from a software company.

As Redditor Wemie1420 put it:

Doesn't feel great that there is literally no alternative other than trashing it. Feels like we're being punished for supporting them. Dissuades me from buying anything Spotify puts out in the future. I feel like there would be some way to approach this without being like, 'yeah we're done. Just throw it out it's a waste of money now.'


!codecels !1337

51
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I know everyone's pretending to be mad but how many of these things did they actually :marseynerd3: sell?

I assume you need to keep an entire team to update it with every single :marseywall: feature that gets added and they make no additional money :marseygangster: by doing so. Obviously it was going :marseysal2: to be short-lived because it has no offline functionality and if anyone thought :marseymindblown: otherwise I've got a bridge :marseyetika: in baltimore to sell them

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Not to mention that if you have a smartphone and CarPlay/Android Auto compatible car (which is pretty much every modern car, with the exception of GM trash), this thing is completely redundant.

Heck, even if you have a car from the previous century, you can buy a Bluetooth to AUX dongle and hook up your phone.

This thing was selling for $90 when it launched. I don't know who was the target audience for this piece of shit.

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Average car is 12.6 years old, so think most Americans have a MY2012 car or older. Apple CarPlay didn't come out until 2014 and Android Auto was 2015. Also the nips at Toyota didn't include either until a couple years ago.

I thought this was pretty r-slurred, too, but it makes a little bit of sense if you're constantly streaming Spotify in an older car.

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>who was the target audience

R-slurs?

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But I didn't buy it? :marseyconfused: :marseygigaretard:

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Im sorry I have to tell you, but you arent rslurred enough. Youre dimwitted at best.

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Redditors :marseysoypoint2:

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women :marseydarkfoidretard: and old people

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Most new GMs support Spotify natively

Mine has the absolute dogshit Android-based infotainment system but it at least supports all major streaming apps

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