Core work still going on 33 years later
Core work still going on 33 years later
Posted Oct 22, 2024 16:26 UTC (Tue) by farnz (subscriber, #17727)In reply to: Core work still going on 33 years later by paulj
Parent article: The long road to lazy preemption
The modern layout existed, but (e.g.) Fords from the 1920s had a mix of layouts - indeed, a Model T and a Model A had different control schemes, and some of the things I mentioned that now seem odd were used by different 1920s Ford models (foot pedals for gear selection, lifting the clutch not pressing it).
If you're used to that sort of array of different possibilities, where you need to read the fine manual before trying to drive because there's so many options, learning how to drive a modern car isn't that hard; just work out how the modern control map to what you expect, and complain because the car does timing advance, choking etc for you. But (as evidenced by people who can drive an automatic transmission, but can't drive a manual transmission) going the other way is harder - you have to do more things that a modern car does for you.
And I've not driven anything without a modern control layout - I've only seen them in museums with my grandfather, who wanted to show me the cars he dreamt about being able to own when he was a child.
