I'm sure it depends on the implementation... I turned it off on my Kia Sorento after it tried to follow the seams in the concrete instead of the lane markings, I had to fight it quite hard.
My son was born with a heart defect. VSD if you're curious. Basically, the most important thing is to eat, gain weight, and outgrow it. What do you think is the one thing we can't get him to do? He's now 8 years old and just a hair over 50 pounds. He's normal height for his age, but skinny as a rail. He refuses to eat anything but chicken nuggets and french fries, and a handful of other things, the only vegetable we can get him to eat is carrots. Yes, I've googled how to feed him a few times, but without much success.
Arch is known for upgrades breaking things, which is easy enough to fix if you know the right incantation, but no beginner is going to guess that correctly, so they post to a forum, and are met with a general condescending attitude, usually several replies that amount to "if you had read the upgrade guide, you'd know what to do." Of course when googling, you're much more likely to find the general upgrade instructions, rather than this week's specific upgrade guide with the known pitfalls and their fixes...
It's really fun in the Phoenix area, where walk lights are barely long enough for an able-bodied person to walk across the street, I really feel for anyone with mobility issues that doesn't have a car... Not to mention how often cars just cruise through the crosswalk before stopping for a right on red... If they stop at all... When I'm driving and need to make a turn, I feel like I'm the only person that looks up and down the sidewalk and behind me for any cyclist that might have missed my signal...
I've told my boss, if something must be done via email, tell me about it through some other channel, otherwise I will ignore it like all the other spam the company sends out. Only ever clicked on one of the company's fake phishing emails once, but that was enough to train me not to look at emails.
may not even understand what a file system is or how it works ... which abstract away from the concept of a hard-drive, a User folder, file extensions, etc.
What's funny is, filesystems, folders, file extensions are already abstractions, there is nothing inherently "right" about those particular abstractions, it's just what we've used for 40 some years... Before that, you might just have blocks on a disk, or a linear stream on a tape, and it was up to you to figure out what went where, and how to find it again. Point being, it's all just a sea of bits, regardless of how you organize them- the goal is to organize them in a way that you can forget the sea of bits.
Still, it works well for "normies"...