• Published On: May 2, 2011

    In the last month or so, the Land Rover UK site has been updated to allow you to select the actual options that will be available on the Evoque.  There’s plenty of text & pictures.

    Visit here and customize one to see what’s available:

    http://www.landrover.com/gb/en/rr/range-rover-evoque/build/

    One complaint on the options list:

    Rear Mirror

    This could be my mistake, but usually the Auto-dimming mirrors do not have that little circled switch, that toggles the mirror up and down – that’s sort of the point of the auto-dimming.  Details Land Rover, details!!

  • Published On: March 21, 2011

    As they normally do, Land Rover sends the personalized Roadside Assistance card shortly after taking delivery of a vehicle.  This time it arrived in a sliding package with an interesting addition.DSC_2327

    DSC_2330

    On the right is the standard Roadside Assistance card, actually the back of the card. 

    On the left is the new addition (or new for me at least).

    DSC_2331

    DSC_2332

    DSC_2333

    Offering to allow me to create a photo mosaic, I figured it was either a program on the USB key or just a bunch of pictures – similar to how they’ve been doing their press packs lately.  So I plugged it in and saw an unexpected sequence – running Windows 7, I saw the Run box appear, text was entered automatically (http://vcgw.net/****/*******, I substituted the asterisks) and then my browser appeared on the web page listed on that card.  What I found odd was that there was no prompt, no autorun box(which is actually blocked) – just a Run dialog, text entered and a browser window.  So I dug a little deeper into Device Manger:

    Untitled-1

    And there it was under HIDs – USB Input Device.  I hadn’t seen one of these before but it’s a very interesting idea – it pretends it’s a keyboard and just enters in the commands directly as if they were being typed.  And while being neat, this could also be very, very dangerous – it’s like letting someone sit right at your keyboard.  And yes, I did have to plug it in but what if someone was able to hack that intermediate address that the USB device plugs in and instead of it redirecting to www.landroverusa.com/welcomerr it automatically brought up something much more malicious?  The actual companies being marketed have to trust that the vcgw.net domain stays legit because if they go out of business and someone plugs this into their computer, who know where it would take them and without any prompting.

    Upon further searching, it looks like American Express & others have used the same device for their marketing as well – all with the vcgw.net redirection service.

    Again, neat idea but maybe a little over done.

  • Published On: March 14, 2011

    While searching for something else, I found the Jaguar Land Rover Careers YouTube Channel.  They have all sorts of videos up there that I haven’t seen before – some are just the normal marketing videos, but others are actually pretty interesting, covering new technologies.  They’ve been up for a year but most only have a few views.  They don’t have real descriptions or anything informative but they are interesting to watch – just not sure how anyone will find them.

     

     

     

  • Published On: March 11, 2011

    When I did my first rant on the TFT-LCD Instrument Panel on the 2010+ Range Rover a few weeks back, my major complaint was the lack of additional functionality that we could get if they’d add in music and/or nav info in that center between the “gauges” area.  While checking out other videos from yesterday’s post on the Jaguar Land Rover Careers YouTube Channel, I found this Range Rover – Go Beyond video:

     

    And right about 20 seconds in, we see this:

    Untitled-1

    Right there, between the gauges, in the normally completely blank area on my North American spec 2011 Range Rover – we see audio system info.

    So I ask, Land Rover, Please!  Or at least, Why?