The Watch Mother Fuckers Onlineupcoming Cadillac Lyriq SUV is the first electric car for the Cadillac car brand, but it's the reimagined dashboard display spanning 33 inches across that attracts the most attention. Mercedes-Benz also has a massive 56-inch Hyperscreen that will be available soon in its first EV.
These car screens and others introduced at the annual tech show CES feature a new user interface that looks more like a well-rendered video game than an infotainment display to turn up the heat or play a podcast.
Past CES shows used to wow with announcements about bigger and bigger dashboard screens, but now it's about what's on them. Images literally pop thanks to 3D renderings, and augmented reality projections layer information on top of the real world.
The Lyriq's 33-inch LED display stands out on its own, but its graphics feel almost toosharp for a screen stuck in a car. The 3D models of the car that appear on-screen for certain menu settings that give away that Cadillac worked with gaming, film, and creative design firms including Territory Studio and Rightpoint. Those are creative teams that normally don't work on car tech.
Interactive 3D models for fairly mundane features, like checking vehicle health and adjusting audio and climate settings, become like selecting your video game character's outfit and weapons. Below is the car health app to check on the vehicle's tires, batteries, and other parts. You can swivel the car around and touch different parts of the car for more information.
While the Mercedes Hyperscreen is a lot of screen with voice control and a separate passenger side entertainment center, it's the AR heads-up display on the windshield that takes the driving experience to the next level. With markers that appear on the road to keep you in the lane or flag your destination, the typical car screen experience moves onto the road.
While Tesla is known for its realistic road graphics on its center screen, its 3D visualizations don't get projected onto the road ahead of the driver like this.
Also in new Mercedes vehicles, AR projections level up with the Cerence-powered "Travel Knowledge" feature that lets the driver glance across the street in many major cities and ask the Mercedes voice assistant, "What's that building up ahead?"
There was also a screen interface redesign for the BMW iDrive system teased at CES before it's officially unveiled in the upcoming BMW iX electric vehicle. With a history of adding new tech features into cars before they become standard (like internet access in the car in 2007 or gesture control in 2015), enhanced imagery and better AR graphics seem likely.
While only a concept, at CES this year the Samsung-owned car audio brand Harman introduced the idea of gaming in the car. The front screen turns into a video game display with high-quality graphics. The gaming feature would only be accessible while the car is parked.
For the rest of us with cars that don't even have a basic touchscreen let alone a 3D model display, aftermarket auto product company Pioneer has a solution.
You can install a 6.8- or 9-inch touchscreen into certain older vehicles and have access to Amazon Alexa voice assistance or Apple CarPlay or Android Auto when you connect your smartphone to the car. It's basic graphics without the video game quality or sharpness, but it turns your "dumb" car into a smarter one.
SEE ALSO: Mercedes-Benz unveils Hyperscreen, a sprawling 56-inch car dashboardIt's no Hyperscreen, but it's a screen.
Topics CES
Come for the Seeds, Stay for the StorytellingAsus ROG Ally deal: Save $80 at Best BuyWordle today: The answer and hints for November 5On Sanctuary Cities: What I Learned Playing Soccer in New OrleansHow the 1215 memes for when you're feeling sad as hellStaff Pick: Stacy Schiff, Kate Zambreno, Elizabeth McKenzie“Infinite Mischief”: Elizabeth Bishop’s Rebuke to Robert LowellThe Fiestas Are Over: Beatrice Mandelman’s Sixties CollagesBose QuietComfort II earbuds deal: $80 off at AmazonAn Elegy for “Stringbean” AkemanNow Online: Our Interviews with Ishmael Reed and J. H. PrynneAn Elegy for “Stringbean” AkemanParting Shot: On Japanese Death Poems and Famous Last Words“Infinite Mischief”: Elizabeth Bishop’s Rebuke to Robert LowellBest deals of the day Nov. 2: Walmart+ memberships, MacBook Air, Bissell CrossWave, and moreTalking About Shakespeare and Company on a Stroll through Paris’s Left BankThomas Lux, 1946–2017Twitter verification: Would you pay $20 a month to be verified? Users weigh in.The Puppets Are Doing Just Fine, Thanks for Asking 'Turner & Hooch' is a Tom Hanks classic worth rediscovering on Disney+ Can you guess which state googled Baby Yoda the most in 2019? Facebook waited two weeks to tell employees payroll data was stolen Miley Cyrus, if you really got married this time, please nod your head like YEAH Off the sidewalk and into the bike lane: Autonomous delivery bot brings lunch orders Twitter's Election Labels return to help you make sense of 2020 elections Kind man dresses wild toad in wonderful, tiny hats to make a little boy happy All your favorite Disney stars have Star Wars questions for Daisy Ridley The Mac Pro is coming today, and Apple Card owners can get it 6% cheaper Strong winds blow away 4 The many tech CEO fails of 2019 Lyft already met its 2017 goal to expand to 100 new cities Everyone's convinced Sean Spicer's upside Baby Yoda is everywhere, including the latest 'The Sims 4' update Ivanka Trump's brand claims sales spiked after White House controversy AT&T launches real 5G in 10 U.S. cities Facebook is out, Apple is in at 2020 Democratic Debate Why learn a foreign language when Google Assistant can speak it for you? Everybody shut up. Just let us enjoy the kids in the BBC video. These are the 5 tech terms you won’t be able to ignore in 2020
2.4095s , 10133.2109375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Mother Fuckers Online】,Information Information Network