CES, formerly known as the customer Electronics display, in Las Vegas continues to provide a sneak peek at upcoming technology. The annual showcase includes advanced automotive tech in an industry striving to reduce pollution and boost occupant safety while also providing greater convenience and entertainment for road warriors. These are the most impressive innovations we saw at this year’s occurrence.
What benevolent of screens and technology can you expect to view in recent vehicles in the coming years? BMW’s all-recent in-cabin digital interface, dubbed Panoramic iDrive, gives us a compelling preview.
Panoramic iDrive has a digital display at the base of the windshield spanning the entire dashboard. This display is called Panoramic imagination, and it projects everything from speed to EV range to navigation guidance, along with climate and audio info. This display pairs with an straightforward-to-reach central touchscreen and advanced head-up display that can assignment 3D-like information on the windshield for the driver. BMW also showcased a recent squared-off steering wheel with illuminated buttons that the business says are very straightforward to use.
We expect Panoramic iDrive will debut in upcoming BMW vehicles in late 2025.
Honda jumped into the deep complete of the electric vehicle pool at CES 2025 with the debut of two all-recent, all-electric models. The Honda 0 SUV and 0 Saloon are based on two wild-looking concept cars shown at last year’s CES, yet these production-ready models haven’t lost any of their aggressive style and will definitely turn heads when they arrive in 2026.
Both will be built in Ohio and will be capable of Level 3 automated driving functionality, meaning drivers will be allowed to drive hands-free and receive their eyes off the road for short periods of period when specific environmental conditions are met. Honda says these 0 models will also use a recent technology interface, called Asimo, that will provide a high degree of personalization to customize the driving encounter for each user.
The launch of the 0 SUV and 0 Saloon will coincide with Honda’s attempt to enhance charging access to drivers through a joint attempt with seven other automakers. The objective is to have 30,000 high-speed charging stations built in North America by 2030. These stations will have plugs with the Tesla-style North American Charging Standard, or NACS, which most automakers have been switching to.
Even in 2025, getting consistent and stable internet service can be a test. We can access the information superhighway through Wi-Fi networks, cellular service or satellite signals, though all three have limitations and are certainly not 100% reliable.
But what if you could merge the power of satellite, cellular and Wi-Fi networks into a single pipeline of internet service? And what if that pipeline could constantly assess and optimize the data stream as you trip between signal sources? That’s exactly what Stellar, a recent business from France, is offering. The business is working with automakers to optimize mobile service by using hardware already built into today’s cars. The complete objective is to have improved, more consistent high-speed internet access in your vehicle, whether you’re going through a city tunnel or driving across the open plains.
Toyota’s imagination for the upcoming of mobility goes beyond EVs and self-driving cars. The business is engineering a complete city surroundings in Japan where everything from building construction to food supply to education and transportation are coordinated for maximum efficiency and minimal environmental impact. The areas of focus include personal transportation, and the business’s massive site, called Woven City, will serve as a test course for automated tech advancement.
Woven City will scale from an initial 50,000 square miles up to 700,000 square miles as construction continues. By the fall of 2025, it will provide housing for about 360 Toyota staff and household members and eventually expand to 2,000-plus residents, including Woven City associate companies involved in construction, food and drink, education and even rocket production.
While it’s challenging to forecast what will arrive out of Toyota’s Woven City that will actually complete up in production vehicles, it’s fair to declare that Toyota will have a head commence on how to borrowing various recent technologies best.
packed self-driving cars have yet to appear, but automakers are chipping away at this elusive tech while making obvious advancement in advanced user interfaces, electric vehicle design, and even comprehensive city planning. While the last few years have seen moderate advancement in these areas, it feels like we’re on the cusp of multiple breakthroughs in the automotive space.
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This narrative was provided to The Associated Press by the automotive website Edmunds. Karl Brauer is a contributor at Edmunds.