The Timaru Herald

New Mercedes screen breaks with convention

Mercedes-Benz gives us a peek at the dash of its upcoming EQS EV and it is rather impressive.

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Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz has unveiled a key interior component of its upcoming electric luxury sedan: a large, curved display that sweeps across almost the entire width of the car instead of a convention­al dashboard.

The MBUX Hyperscree­n option available on the EQS sedan uses artificial intelligen­ce to learn what functions the driver uses most, such as navigation and hands-free phone calls.

Ola Kallenius, chief executive of parent company Daimler AG, said last week in a recorded video presented online that the display ‘‘only shows what is needed: no scrolling, no browsing’’.

For instance, if the driver often uses the hot-stone massage function during the winter, the user experience system will suggest the comfort function during cold weather.

Or, if the driver calls someone regularly on the way home, the system will suggest a call at the usual time.

The screen also lets the frontseat passenger watch television in some markets, while preventing the driver from seeing that part of the screen to avoid distractio­n.

Kallenius said the EQS would showcase the company’s efforts in digitalisa­tion and electrific­ation, two trends that are shaking up the industry.

The EQS, the electric counterpar­t to the Mercedes convention­ally powered S-Class, is one of four battery-powered models coming this year as German carmakers seek to challenge Tesla. – AP

The MBUX Hyperscree­n option available on the EQS sedan uses artificial intelligen­ce to learn what functions the driver uses most, such as navigation and hands-free phone calls.

 ??  ?? The new EQS electric sedan from Mercedes will replace the convention­al dashboard with an optional display that extends almost the width of the car.
The new EQS electric sedan from Mercedes will replace the convention­al dashboard with an optional display that extends almost the width of the car.

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