Our Hyundai Tuscon caught me out the other day.
It was a light raining and I was backing out of the driveway. As the rain was light the front wipers were on intermittently, and when I went to back out the rear wipers were also running.
I then spent 2 minutes faffing around with the rear wiper switch. I was sure I hadn't turned on the rear wipers, I confirmed the switch was in the off position, I cycled the switch to on / off and the wipers were still running. I gave up, backed out of the driveway and was thinking of taking it to the dealer to get it fixed, put in in drive and the rear wiper stopped.
So, the car decided to run the rear wiper when in reverse as the front wipers were on. Regardless of where I set the switch. Without feedback. Ugh.
That's common in modern cars. Many makes have an entry in the setup menu where you can configure this behaviour, and store it for future use.
Frankly, I'm finding a lot of it quite unfathomable.
The Ioniq I've had for about ten days, I'm still trying to figure out whether or not I've switched it off or not. Sometimes I find it still bongs at me, but doesn't explain why. I live in trepidation I'll come back and find the battery's drained.
On the plus side, one of the compliants I used to have with my old Prius plug in hybrid was that hardly any of the free charging points provided at some supermarket car parks ever worked, so I just gave up using them. Thankfully, five years later, we seem to be in rather better shape regarding this, although they do tend to be slow rate chargers.
I've tried using CarPlay and I'm not really sure why I would use that and not the built in sat nav.
Today's in-car tech needs an 8 year old's mindset to make it work. It's just a shame 8 years olds can't drive cars.