Autocar

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Honda has actually done what no other cars and truck maker is doing, and returned to analogue controls for some functions on the new Honda Jazz

While a lot of makers are moving to touchscreen controls, determining smartphone use as their motivation – most recently seen in Audi’s newest A3 Honda has chosen to reestablish heating and a/c controls by means of a dial rather than touchscreen, as in the previous-generation Jazz.

Jazz job leader Takeki Tanaka explained: “The reason is rather basic – we wanted to reduce motorist disturbance for operation, in particular, for the heating system and a/c.

” We changed it from touchscreen to dial operation, as we got consumer feedback that it was hard to run intuitively. You needed to look at the screen to alter the heater seating, therefore, we altered it so one can run it without looking, providing more confidence while driving.”

More and more manufacturers are moving to touchscreen-only controls. The new Audi A3’s electronic devices boss Melanie Limmer informed Autocar recently its choice to eliminate some physical buttons was made as “more and more people are entering touch functions with smartphones” and included that the brand-new system is as user-friendly as the previous one.

While Honda’s choice to return to physical controls will be popular with some – including, no doubt, its aging owner base in the UK – the predicted relocation towards more voice-controlled actions in automobiles might remove the debate around touchscreens versus analogue controls in the future.

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https://www.thenewsedge.com/2020/04/01/autocar/

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