They have to feed the voracious appetite of the internet. They have nothing of substance to share, nor should they. IMO.This is just silly. First the useless wooden tailgate and now this. Where's the substance Slate? Not some superficial arts and crafts like this. Show us electrical diagrams and CAD files.
While I agree this is silly, I don't think that's a bad thing. Creating the aura of customization / modification / artistry only helps expand the audience, in my opinion. For instance, the nuts and bolts things that I'm interested in are not the same as the "arts and crafts" that my wife is interested in. If they only showed the attachment points and wiring diagrams to support all the different ways to build an audio system, my wife would just see that there's no radio.This is just silly. First the useless wooden tailgate and now this. Where's the substance Slate? Not some superficial arts and crafts like this. Show us electrical diagrams and CAD files.
You’re right but Slate is built around customization and will likely develop a community around it. This is just a taste of what people will do. If this is successful we are likely going to see some absolutely insane Slate Builds on Social Media and possibly on the roads which will help sell the truck. So giving the slate prototypes to creators and telling them to go nuts with it isn’t a bad decision to start help developing that community for the Truck.Seems that Slate is investing a bit of money in small creators to show how "customizable" this truck is.
Love the investment in the creators- assuming they are being well compensated- but I can't help but feel that these customizations aren't specific to Slate.... I could put a custom tailgate on any truck, or custom seat covers....
It's not a bad thing at all, but when the only thing Slate marketing has been harping on is customization for most of their ads, it prompts an eye roll or two. There has to be a balance and so far there's not a single peep from the so called Slate University that should have the technical documentation for the DIY tinker crowd who'll actually end up getting the most use out of the barebones platform.While I agree this is silly, I don't think that's a bad thing. Creating the aura of customization / modification / artistry only helps expand the audience, in my opinion. For instance, the nuts and bolts things that I'm interested in are not the same as the "arts and crafts" that my wife is interested in. If they only showed the attachment points and wiring diagrams to support all the different ways to build an audio system, my wife would just see that there's no radio.
Once the product gets closer to launch, I suspect we'll get more of both technical and "arts and crafts." Something for (almost) everyone....