iDrive is Dead, Long Live iDrive

iDrive is Dead, Long Live iDrive

BMWBlog told us all in December that BMW's Neu Klasse EVs won't have the notorious BMW iDrive hardware controller. The news ought to have had the impact of Apple's introduction of touchscreen smartphones. The fact that it did not reflects the challenge of understanding the true status of human machine interfaces in cars and their ongoing evolution.

Coincident with BMW's iDrive shift, BMW showed, last fall, its vision of the automobile cockpit of the future - a Tesla-fied vision of simplicity that notably eliminated both the iDrive and the traditional instrument cluster in favor of a single central display. Once again, this ought to have been earth-shifting news, but it was more or less overlooked amid the maelstrom of other automotive technology developments encompassing electrification, autonomous operation, and software-defined whatever.

Perhaps the good people at Euro New Car Assessment Program were paying attention. Euro NCAP just announced changes in their guidelines for critical driving controls - requiring physical buttons, dials, or stalks for turn signals, windshield wipers, car horns, emergency flashers, and SOS calls. The organization, which holds the keys to five-star safety ratings, have yet to codify the requirement, but they are clearly putting the industry on notice - drawing a line in the faux wood veneer as it were, that there is a limit to what the organization will tolerate in automobile dashboards.

It was perhaps inevitable that regulators and safety agencies would weigh in as the screenification of cars progressed to clearly anticipatable extremes. Pillar-to-pillar LCD displays are becoming increasingly common and BMW's Neu Klasse will introduce a new style of head-up display embedded in the lower portion of the windshield.

Automotive engineers instinctively seek to create unique user experiences in their cars intended to "define the brand." This drive for uniqueness is balanced by a need to keep up with the latest advances.

For years, BMW insisted on the need for the iDrive hardware controller - the dial built into the console of most BMWs. BMW fought desperately against touchscreens, arguing that they were not only a distraction - requiring glancing and reaching - but that the screens were too far from the driver to be appropriate for touching. The iDrive fulfilled the role of "touching" via the turn-and-push of the device. BMW eventually added buttons alongside the dial.

Competing car makers from Audi to Infiniti to Hyundai ultimately introduced their own hardware controllers, modeled on the iDrive, reflecting BMW's broad industry influence. Even as car makers slowly began introducing touchscreens and testing voice interfaces and gestures, the hardware controllers multiplied.

The BMWBlog post details precisely which BMWs in which model years will lose the iDrive controller. But BMW execs say and the BMWBlog post acknowledges that the iDrive will persist in at least some BMWs through the end of the decade.

My initial reaction to the Euro NCAP announcement of required hardware interfaces was severe skepticism. The EU has generally done a good job on safety regulations, but requiring hardware interfaces for turn signals, the car horn, and emergency flashers somehow seemed silly to me.

What I saw as reactionary, my TechInsights colleague, Claudia Krehl, who is an expert in these matters, assured me were reasonable. A driver shouldn't struggle to honk the horn, signal a turn, turn on the windshield wipers, or call for help.

I understand all that. I also understand the confusion that greets the average car rental customer getting into an unfamiliar car with unfamiliar buttons, knobs, and screen prompts.

Still, one never forgets their first experience sitting in a Tesla. The jarring vista of a clean, flat, undistracting dashboard and a single, central display is mind blowing. Tesla's decision to eliminate the traditional instrument cluster was an amazing choice - the discovery of a regulatory loophole. We didn't need the instrument cluster!

Of course, this glorious revelation is upended by the frustration of trying to locate simple operations like, for example, opening the glove box, via the massive touch screen and its less-than-glorious drop down menus etc. The folks at Euro-NCAP probably got this just right. They also, notably, were silent on the removal of the instrument cluster.

Who hasn't questioned the efficacy of an instrument cluster located behind and obscured by the steering wheel? It's annoying and, even, distracting.

The Neu Klasse meets this challenge by eliminating the instrument cluster but replacing it with a bottom-of-the-windshield display. So it isn't just subtraction.

The Neu Klasse in effect BMW-izes Tesla's vision of the vehicle cockpit. Now all they need to do is add physical controls for the horn, windshield wipers, turn signals, emergency flashers, and SOS and it will be perfect.

BMWBlog - https://www.bmwblog.com/2023/12/08/bmw-neue-klasse-models-skip-idrive-controller/

BMW - All New iDrive Coming to the Neu Klasse - https://www.press.bmwgroup.com/usa/article/detail/T0434058EN_US/all-new-bmw-idrive-coming-to-the-neue-klasse?language=en_US

TechInsights - Euro NCAP Says No to Touchscreen Controls for Critical Tasks - https://library.techinsights.com/search/blog-viewer/1844829

The auto industry needs to look carefully at the real world user and safety. My biggest personal exposure to this issue is with rental cars. I'm sufficiently safety conscious to give up on anything that requires my attention away from the task of driving and so I'm the one driving the rental car with heating on full blast and the windows open vowing never to hire that make/ model again. Analogue please! For safety 's sake!

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Joseph Schmelzer

Tech Business and Product Generalist. Focused on 3D Heterogeneous Integration and related with Glass (Fused Silica). Semiconductor Packaging. Product Development. IMAPS Member.

1 年

For a fun analogy, have a look at the original 747 cockpits...compare to the 787 Dreamliners today - with much more functionality and complexity. I remain surprised that Donald Norman's 'The Invisible Computer' isn't required reading for every Engineering student... https://www.ft.com/content/117845bd-6338-4fc6-a593-ea4046cde087

Rick Bullotta

Investor/Advisor/Mentor

1 年

"But requiring hardware interfaces for turn signals, the car horn, and emergency flashers somehow seemed silly to me". All essential because they need to be activated on short notice. Also windshield wipers. Add to the fact that these should not be distracting tasks for the driver, and putting them on the touchscreen makes no sense.

Lukas Neckermann

Advisor, Board Member, Founder | Helping leaders, founders, and investors navigate the #MobilityRevolution | #SmartCities #SmartMobility | Teacher, Learner, Keynote Speaker (on 5 continents)

1 年

I recall when iDrive was launched - I was at BMW Group at the time. Clunky as the first iteration was, the flood of new functions and features made it necessary to create menus and submenus. There were simply too many buttons. Fast forward to a time with even more functions, less driver engagement, and the prospect of unnecessary steering wheels on the horizon. Will be interesting how this shakes out for the interim. The combination of voice control, hand gestures, and occasional screen-touches seems sufficient to tide us over until such a time when we needn’t drive ourselves.

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