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I see it as a no-brainer. To phrase it differently, what exactly is the added value BMW can provide over a Google/Apple infotainment system?

They need to focus on transitioning to EVs, there's no point in wasting energy on building and maintaining an infotainment system when a good out of the box option exists.

Later once they pulled off the EV transition if they want they can fork android and go from there.



Have you driven a BMW that came out in the last 5-10 years?

In addition to having been selling EVs for years, their UIs are amazing. They're far ahead of the junky android auto (and first party) implementations I've seen from other manufacturers:

- No touchscreen; just a jog wheel

- Bluetooth "browse" works great. I can tune podcasts, global radio stations and my music collection by feel.

- The map's eco mode routes based on the power train consumption profile of your car.

- "Send map address from phone to car" just works.

- "Idiot light" stuff is intuitive (e.g., resetting the TPM after filling the tires; knowing when service / inspection is due, etc, etc.)

- Did I mention no touch screen? This is important if you plan to drive the car while the computer is turned on.

On top of all that, it does a great job of getting out of the way and letting you focus on the road.


> - No touchscreen; just a jog wheel

Navigating any more than 3 in screen elements is dangerous with jog wheels, IMO. It requires switching visual attention from the road several times. It's even worse with hierarchical navigation. For those a touch screen is much more direct and requires less hand/eye coordination and focus.

> - The map's eco mode routes based on the power train consumption profile of your car..

I'm skeptical that the power train type of a car would make one route significantly more efficient than another. The biggest factor in route efficiency is route length and the speed it is driven at, not the power train.


> switching visual attention from the road

Not really. If its a rental and your first BMW sure, get familiar with the system. But once you are familiar you can use most of it blind - without taking your eyes of the road. Just turn the wheel 3 steps to the right, press, two steps left etc.pp. Its way more intuitive and safer than a touchscreen.


Can't say I have, but I am guessing most new buyers are looking for that "techy" big touchscreen experience (even if it does provide a worse UX) so I'm not sure BMW has much of a choice (but I have read zero market research)

Also, it's confusing but Android Automotive != Android Auto, it's actually a different system and one which seems to be getting good reviews (but ymmv)




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