Not trying to add fuel to the fire, but this sort of practice of updating a broken product is really only become prevalent 'recently' (in the last decade or so). Before high-speed Internet was readily available nearly everywhere, back when people had dial-up connections or painfully slow ADSL, there were no updates to products and software. It was just finished and complete right out of the box (mostly). I personally think that the current trend of "sell it now, fix it later" has really ruined people's expectations of receiving a quality product out of the box. The video game industry suffers this same problem - games are buggy, broken, and sometimes completely unplayable until "the patch" arrives to hopefully fix it. *cough Cyberpunk 2077 cough* This isn't likely to get better, either. Companies know they can send out a half-baked product now, charge the consumer a premium, and promise to fix it later. I'd rather wait longer to get a feature-rich and fully functional product, but a lot of consumers want more and want it faster.
Sheesh, I feel like a grumpy old man now.
This is definitely true. Tesla does this all the time, and that’s a $60k+ car!