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Forward-looking: There's no doubt we're now surrounded by touchscreens everywhere, including in our vehicles. While these displays have enabled automakers to integrate more high-tech features, the over-reliance on screen controls has revealed significant safety drawbacks. Fortunately, some automakers are starting to think outside the box… or rather, outside the dashboard.

A new concept from Hyundai's parts division, Hyundai Mobis, developed in partnership with optics specialists Zeiss, aims to transform your entire windshield into one massive display. Dubbed the "Holographic Windshield Display," it takes the modest head-up displays we've seen for decades and dramatically expands their scope.

Rather than just projecting basic information like speed or turn-based directions onto a small part of the windshield, this system envisions menus, apps, videos, and even games spanning the full width of the glass in front of you.

In the concept render shown, there's no central touchscreen – everything is displayed on the windshield. This suggests that voice and gesture controls will likely be the primary input methods, since you can't exactly reach out and touch your windshield.

Mobis describes the technology as "navigation and driving information unfolding like a panorama across the wide, transparent windshield" in its press release. Meanwhile, passengers could watch movies or video call friends, who appear as holograms on the glass.

To prevent distractions, what's displayed to the driver would differ from what passengers see. For example, the driver may only see directions and essential info, while passengers could binge-watch their favorite shows.

As for how the technology works, the core innovation is a transparent, razor-thin film coating on the windshield that enables holographic visuals. The film, which is less than 100 micrometers thick (about the width of a human hair), uses photochemical properties to create patterns from the projector's light, rendering videos and images.

Zeiss's role in the partnership involves supplying the specialized holographic technology, with its expertise in precision optics playing a key part.

Hyundai and Zeiss report that prototype demos are already happening behind closed doors, and the system is targeted for production as soon as 2027. In just a few years, we could move from screen fatigue to having our entire windshields become infotainment displays. The only remaining question is whether this will improve or hinder driver attentiveness.

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Stop trying to reinvent the wheel. Know what is coming back in luxury vehicles? Physical buttons. Touch screens were thought to be a luxury item for maybe 5 years and that trend is starting to disappear. Take this nonsense out of cars. The tech is certainly cool, you'll get no argument from me on that. The thing is, it makes operating a vehicle more difficult and, by proxy, more dangerous. It has no business being in a vehicle

Stop this nonsense. Worse visibility and ****tionality for what? Something a marketing manager thinks will help sell cars?
 
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I really dislike the hologram on the windshield - had to borrow a car from the dealership while mine was in for some warranty fixes. The brightness of the constant hologram on the dash gave me a headache with the speed and popup of cars and crap. Reminded me of playing a game like this as a kid:


I'm guessing there was some setting somewhere to turn it off, but I didn't want to dig through settings. Just drove home, parked the car in my driveway and drove it back to the dealership the next day to get my car.

I'd hate to have everything show up as a hologram above the dash, that would be a nightmare for me.
 
I do like speed, engine revs, and navigation on the glass.... but I don't wan't a bunch of other crap.
 
Speed and basic navigation ("turn here") are really all that's needed, and there should be a button on the steering wheel to toggle it on and off. A small alert icon that changes based on what kind of warning is about to be announced through your stereo might be OK, too.
 
Not yet shown in the diagram, their plan for 5 of the 6 panels to be advertisements.
 
My touch screen in my car is unresponsive. It probably burned through the years so every time I need to use it, I need to fight with it.

Give me back my controls over buttons on my driving wheel.
 
As an advanced driver, I find not only infotainment systems but also Sat navigation in the centre of the dash, to be a dangerous distraction, I won't have a satnav on in my car.
 
My father passed in 2020. He sold cars from 1967 until 1999. I'm sure glad he isn't around to see this overpriced GARBAGE!
Finding an answer to a question that does not exist! Get rid of all this garbage and go back to a small display for the stereo, BUTTONS & KNOBS are the way to go, not to mention less expensive and less cost to repair! I'm glad my 2011 doesn't have all this garbage!
 
Nope, and yet another reason I will never ever buy a Hyundai or Kia. I want analogue dials. I do not need digital BS. My wife's Mazda 3 just had the IC chip for the digital speedo die and now Mazda want $3700 to repalce it and then keep you car for 3 weeks while they send the speedo to the only place in Australia that is allowed to calibrate odometer reading. Apparently, though, you can buy the replacement IC for a few bucks and then just need to find someone with electronics skills to replace it. But point is in a car I want old schools buttons, dials, gauges that are virtually bullet proof and easy and cheap to replace oh and IMO they look 1000x better than any disgusting giant iPad.
 

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