One of the most rewarding parts of an open setup is the custom in‑car dashboard. A simple recipe is Node‑RED for logic and data plumbing, plus its dashboard nodes for gauges, charts, and buttons. Point a kiosk‑mode browser at your local dashboard, and you have a live, touch‑friendly UI for speed, coolant, battery, tire pressures, and whatever else you decode. If you prefer a full smart‑home style experience, Home Assistant works well on a tablet and can show trip tiles, presence, geofences, and sensor cards next to your home automations.
Open source driver assistance has made huge strides, but you should approach it with a safety‑first mindset. OpenPilot offers advanced lane keeping and adaptive cruise on supported vehicles with compatible hardware, and the codebase is actively developed by a large community. It is not a toy—you need to follow hardware and installation guidance carefully and stay attentive behind the wheel. For research and low‑speed environments, Autoware and Apollo provide full autonomy stacks, including perception, planning, and control, but they require substantial expertise and are best suited to controlled scenarios.
Public, well-lit, and familiar spots are the standard. In HK, that usually means the unpaid area of an MTR station, near information counters, ticket machines, or customer service where there are people and cameras. Mall atriums, food courts, and library entrances are also solid because they are staffed and easy to describe. Avoid low-traffic footbridges, dark corners, and exits that close early. If an item needs testing, pick a place with seating and power nearby, like a cafe where you can order a quick drink while you check.
Wheels, tires, trim, and glass are the finishing moves that make a car look “detailed” instead of just “washed.” Clean wheels with a dedicated brush set—barrel, spoke, and lug nut tools make quick work without scratching. An iron-reactive wheel cleaner dissolves stubborn brake dust; rinse thoroughly and dry to avoid water spotting. Seal the wheels or apply a light ceramic to cut future cleaning time dramatically. Tires come last: scrub them until the foam turns white, then apply a dressing. Satin looks modern and clean; super-gloss can read greasy. Choose what fits your car’s vibe.
Parts you will meet early: “le volant” (steering wheel), “les freins” (brakes), “l’accelerateur,” “l’embrayage” (clutch), “la boite de vitesses” (gearbox, manuelle or automatique), “le pare-brise” (windshield), “les essuie-glaces” (wipers), “les phares” (headlights), “les pneus” (tires), “la roue de secours” (spare tire), “le capot” (hood), “le coffre” (trunk), “le retroviseur” (mirror), “la plaque d’immatriculation” (license plate). Inside: “le siege enfant,” “la clim,” and the “GPS.”