Hyundai,
a
company
that
has
been
just
as
guilty
in
the
past
of
spreading
the
touchscreen
scourge
in
cars
as
any
other,
has
been
course-correcting
lately,
putting
more
buttons
and
knobs
into
its
cars.
The
reason
isn’t
surprising:
people
hate
touchscreens,
at
least
for
certain
essential
controls
like
HVAC
systems,
and
they
told
Hyundai
so.
“As
we
were
adding
integrated
[infotainment]
screens
in
our
vehicles,
we
also
tried
putting
touchscreen-based
controls,
and
people
didn’t
prefer
that,”
Hyundai
Design
North
America
VP
Ha
Hak-soo
told
Korea
JoongAng
Daily
in
an
interview
that
InsideEVs
spotted.
He
said
Hyundai,
which
was
as
infatuated
with
touchscreens
as
the
rest
of
the
industry
at
first,
found
that
in
focus
group
testing
people
got
“stressed,
annoyed
and
steamed
when
they
want
to
control
something
in
a
pinch
but
are
unable
to
do
so.”
You
can
see
the
result
of
those
lessons
in
cars
like
the
Hyundai
Ioniq
6
—
an
EV
that,
yes,
has
big
ol’
touchscreens.
But
it
also
features
physical
buttons
and
knobs
for
a
lot
of
common
controls
(though
it
does
still
use
touch-sensitive
buttons
for
climate
controls).
Still,
although
Hyundai
is
prioritizing
buttons
now,
HDNA
head
of
interior
design
Kevin
Kang
told
the
outlet
that
self-driving
cars
could
move
the
needle
back
towards
non-button
controls.
Not
everyone
is
keen
on
restoring
buttons
to
their
rightful
place.
Last
month,
Rivian’s
Wassym
Bensaid
suggested
that
the
future
is
actually
voice
control.
Maybe
that
will
help
with
the
safety
issues
presented
by
touchscreens,
which
will
earn
some
touchscreen-heavy
cars
lower
safety
ratings
in
Europe
starting
in
2026.
But
will
it
be
less
frustrating
to
yell
at
an
LLM
over
the
noise
of
screaming
kids,
construction,
cruddy
roads,
or
rain?
Color
me
skeptical.
Just
give
us
the
buttons,
y’all.
Original author: Wes Davis
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