Volkswagen will restore physical buttons to the dashboard in its latest compact car, part of a wider move away from touchscreens.

In a particularly retro touch, the new ID Polo will even have a volume dial.

For a decade or so, automakers rushed to replace knobs and switches with screens, Autoblog noted in October, but users largely disliked them: Controlling the air conditioning, for example, required delving through submenus while driving, which was both difficult and dangerous. Research found that using touchscreens took longer and distracted drivers.

Hyundai, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, and VW have all announced plans to return to more tactile controls, and US and EU regulators announced last year that cars with touchscreen controls could get worse safety ratings.

  • extremeboredom@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Thanks to these visionary titans of industry we’ve now got 10+ years of used cars with HOT GARBAGE interfaces. Guess they learned their lesson eventually but the used market is screwed for a long time.

    • RustySharp@programming.dev
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      5 days ago

      Before buying our latest, the family sat down and defined the minimum physical controls a car needs to have; functions that are used often while the vehicle is actively moving.

      • Aircon
      • Lights
      • Cruise
      • Media

      Wipers, maybe. Automatic wipers are annoying, but deemed not a dealbreaker as long as the others above are present.

      It was shocking how many makes/models did not even meet the bare minimum.

      • Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk
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        4 days ago

        Automatic wipers are annoying

        Are they? I like mine - not having to operate my wipers manually like some kind of peasant.