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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Sunday, June 22, 2025

Modern vehicles have quietly become rolling monuments to terrible user experience, trading intuitive physical controls for flashy but dangerous touchscreen interfaces.

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... The consequences are measurable and severe: studies now show touchscreen vehicles require up to four times longer to perform basic functions than their button-equipped counterparts, creating a distracted driving crisis that automakers refuse to acknowledge.

A Swedish car magazine, Vi Bilgare, conducted a study comparing how long it takes drivers to perform basic tasks like adjusting climate controls or changing the radio station using touchscreens versus traditional physical buttons. The results showed that in the worst-performing modern car, it took drivers up to four times longer to complete these tasks compared to an older vehicle with physical controls. ...

Even after allowing drivers time to familiarize themselves with each system, touchscreen-equipped cars consistently required more time and attention, which could translate into increased distraction and reduced safety on the road.

So while not every touchscreen system is equally inefficient, the general trend supports the idea that physical buttons are quicker and less distracting to use.

The psychology behind this dangerous trend reveals an uncomfortable truth about today's automotive industry. Car manufacturers aren't prioritizing safety or usability - they're chasing cost savings and tech bro aesthetics at the expense of driver attention.

Physical buttons, switches, and knobs require expensive tooling, individual wiring, and mechanical engineering. A single touchscreen replaces dozens of these components while creating the illusion of cutting-edge sophistication. The result is a generation of vehicles where adjusting the air conditioning or changing the radio station now requires the same focused attention as sending a text message. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-06-22 06:58 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 2

There are literally buttons on the wheel to change tubes or radio. Ffs

#2 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-06-22 07:37 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Tunes

#3 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-06-22 07:37 PM | Reply

@#2 ... There are literally buttons on the wheel to change tunes or radio. Ffs ...

I like those buttons on my steering wheel. And to provide context, my car is 23 years old, no computer screens in sight in the car.

I know the locations of the buttons, including those on the steering wheel that go to the next (or previous) tune on the iPod, or to change the volume, or to bump up the speed of the speed control, without having to look at them. Indeed, the speed control controls are only on the steering wheel.

Touchscreens in cars are a major step backwards in car UI design because the touchscreens require both sight and mental attention, when drivers should be watching road conditions around them.

To me, it is similar to playing a video game while trying to drive ...



#4 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-06-22 08:27 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 4

Honestly... I don't understand the reason for a touch screen. My car is 13 years old, and I paid 8k for it 8 years ago. It has the possibility for Bluetooth, but it never worked, so I got an adapter. Gets 35+ MPG, handles well, but it's nothing fancy.

Recently, a friend of mine, unable to drive home from a function, asked me to drive him home in his "loaded" shiny new vehicle. The shift lever was a dial knob and everything else was controlled from the LARGE touch screen above the center console desk and refreshment stand.

WTF?

Seems that before they make all that stuff... they need an infrastructure to accommodate it... not try and fit it into the well-used, dated, worn-out one from the 1960s that we're still using.

#5 | Posted by RightisTrite at 2025-06-23 06:45 AM | Reply | Funny: 1

#5

Well, my car is 12 years old, I paid $10k for it 9 years ago, and it's got Bluetooth and a 7 inch screen, but didn't come with CarPlay so I added a 10 inch screen for that, thought about changing the APIM to put it on the internal screen but realized that more screens would be better. Gets 50+ MPGe, goes up to 20 miles without using any gas, and has been the best car I've owned yet.

There's no way I'd ever own a car without a nice big screen again. I really want my next car to be the electric Mustang, with a 15.5 inch main screen and 10 inch gauge screen, a friend got one and I love it.

I've been putting screens in cars long before they were standard, I did the carputer thing decades ago.

#6 | Posted by DarkVader at 2025-06-23 07:50 AM | Reply

As a private pilot in the 70's & 80's, I was taught to keep your eyes outside the plane and to do a periodic, quick scan of the gauges, so you adapt to tactile sensing to make adjustments on the panel, throttle etc. I started doing that in whatever vehicle I was driving and still do to this day.

#7 | Posted by Yodagirl at 2025-06-23 11:53 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

So much of this depends on the user interface and the user's familiarity with it.
I have no problem with my Fords' screens because I am very familiar with it.
I had a rental Tesla and found it almost undrivable because everything, including the speedometer, was on a central, overcluttered screeen.

#8 | Posted by MBlue at 2025-06-23 12:18 PM | Reply

I was watching a video the other day of a modern sports car. Changing the temp settings was in a screen 5 or 6 screens deep from the home screen. They have passed the point of ridiculous with screens since about 2019.

#9 | Posted by GalaxiePete at 2025-06-23 04:42 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

I bought a 25 year old Dodge Dakota a year and a half ago, because it had a distributor cap, rotor, plugs and wires. That's as modern as I plan on getting at 74.

#10 | Posted by Yodagirl at 2025-06-23 06:01 PM | Reply

Touchscreens aside, I regularly see people texting and driving.

And they hold up traffic at stop lights because so many are on their phones instead of paying attention.

#11 | Posted by AMERICANUNITY at 2025-06-23 07:03 PM | Reply

The other thing screens have squashed for me is riding my bicycle along the side of a road. Too many idiots watching their phones while they're driving. I used to enjoy riding tens or dozens of miles at a stretch. A couple of close calls since the advent of the iPhone have cured me of that.

#12 | Posted by AMERICANUNITY at 2025-06-24 03:16 AM | Reply

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