And just wait until it fails! Then you have to go through the process of figuring out how to get the trunk open and get the groceries out.(before the ice cream melts and the milk goes sour)* The auto-closing trunk -
On a few very high-end luxury sedans such as the Mercedes S-Class, they've begun installing a system that opens and closes the trunk for you using electric motors and servos. It's a classic example of technology know one really needs that's there just to show how much money its owner can throw at his car. The system actually makes it more time-consuming to open or close the trunk -because if the trunk closes too fast that would be "unsafe" - and someone might sue!
If you try and open the trunk the old fashioned way, the electric stuff fights you all the way. Same thing going the other way - it's actually harder to try and push the thing closed. You pretty much have to sit there and wait while it gradually whirrrrs, clicks and clamps itself shut. Ah, luxury!
I hate how they put brake lights in the trunk lid. It makes the thing so damn heavy. The trunk lid on my (W124) Mercedes is perfect, pop the button and bump the trunk lid and it floats open with spring power, no damn gas shocks, heavy tail lights, or sound insulation. The trunk on my Jetta has gas shocks that make it easier to open, but a PITA to close, even with nothing in your hands.
Now some manufacturers even have a light blinks of the passenger isn't wearing a seatbelt. Gotta start stocking up on the pre-safety cars now...before they are banned.* "Belt Minder" buzzer -
This one's Ford's bad idea, but sadly virtually every other car company has joined in (except Nissan). All in the name of "safety," of course. Basically, if you decline to buckle up - even if it's just to roll the 20 yards down the driveway to the mailbox - the car starts to beep angrily and a light blinks on and off until you do. Bad boy! Now, wearing a seat belt is a fine idea. But it' shouldn't be the automaker's job to play the role of Big Momma. Some of us pre-safety seat, pre-helmet types don't like to buckle-up; the reasons don't matter. It's our business. What's next? "Cholesterol Minder"? Will future cars sound the alarm if weight sensors in the seat detect we've fattened up to the point of unacceptably increasing our risk of stroke or diabetes? Will the car scream if the height/weight monitors discover we've topped our Body Mass Index?