Recent Updates

 

12/10/2025 12:00 AM

Citroen mulls sub-£15k EV to replace C1 city car

 

12/09/2025 12:00 PM

How Chinese brands' influence over Europe could shrink

 

12/09/2025 12:00 PM

Ford to use Renault platform for two affordable EVs in Europe

 

12/09/2025 12:00 PM

Exclusive: Rimac developing solid-state battery for Bugatti

 

12/09/2025 12:00 AM

A car like the Bugatti Veyron may never happen again

 

12/09/2025 12:00 AM

Company car tax ‘easement’ creates loophole for luxury PHEVs

 

12/08/2025 12:00 PM

Exclusive: Hyundai to resurrect petrol-powered i30 N

 

12/08/2025 12:00 PM

Ciao, belter: why I'm selling my Lancia Delta Integrale after 24 years

 

12/08/2025 12:00 PM

Smart #6 unveiled as plug-in hybrid saloon to rival BMW 3 Series

 

12/08/2025 12:00 PM

Lotus Eletre PHEV set for huge power output and 220-mile EV range

<<    1   2   3   4   5   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 7348   Next >
Touchscreens in cars? The truth is we need them
Monday, May 05, 2025 12:00 PM
Mini cooper e interior screen Mini has got the right idea with its latest infotainment display, even if it's not exactly perfect

A while back, someone made the case on this website for cars with no digital screens. We look at screens all day anyway, and they’re distracting and just plain lazy design, the author posited.

The author in question was, er… me. So allow me to set the record straight by disagreeing with myself.

Yes, car makers’ screen addictions have got out of hand and I enjoy the zen of simple cars, but for the vast majority of mainstream cars, touchscreens are essential to harnessing the inherent complexity and something that customers want.

The Ineos Grenadier demonstrates as much: its interior looks like the flight deck of an airliner. You know, the things that require multiple years of study and training to learn how to operate.

I firmly believe that certain essential, often-used functions should ideally be controlled by physical buttons, like the interior temperature, seats and useless mandatory driver assistance features.

But the tyre pressure reset, the setting for deciding whether the speedo should be in miles or kilometres, the equaliser for the audio? It’s stuff you adjust once and then forget about, so a screen is perfect for them.

Remember those separate single-DIN equaliser units with sliders in ’80s and ’90s cars? What a waste of space those were.

When sensibly implemented, touchscreens can make a limited amount of dashboard space much more useful by giving the driver quick and easy access to a multitude of functions while keeping the peripheral stuff out of sight.

The classic BMW iDrive rotary controller is brilliant for scrolling through menus or zooming in and out on the sat-nav map, so it makes an ideal partner to a well-laid-out screen, but trying to enter an address with it is excruciating. 

A touchscreen does that much better. Unlike some, I don’t think touchscreens are inherently dangerous to use in a moving car. Some of them definitely are, and there should also be standards for the response time and reliability of these things, because there’s nothing more distracting than ineffectually prodding at a dead or – possibly worse – nearly dead touchscreen.

But if the hardware can keep up and the menus are sensibly laid out, with big icons, simple graphics and a clear sense of prioritisation that puts important stuff permanently on screen, touchscreens can be great.

Apple CarPlay has been a game-changer, because it lets you safely control music and podcasts. And the dinner-plate touchscreen in new Minis, for all its faults, is a great reinvention of an old styling cue and feels like an extension of the brand.

Touchscreens are a sort of superpower for interior designers. But in the same way that Spider-Man falls off the odd roof in his early days and is occasionally tempted to use his powers for evil, car makers need to learn to find a balance.

< Prev    of 7348   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields