Daily Maverick

BMW’s colour-changing car steals the tech show at CES in Las Vegas

Gadgets were upstaged by an electric vehicle and a self-driving tractor at the Consumer Electronic­s Show

- Toby Shapshak Toby Shapshak is editor-in-chief of Stuff Studios and publisher of Scrolla.Africa.

If you want a weird way of defining the beginning of 2022, then look no further than the most exciting technology previewed at the recent annual gadget-fest that is the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas – a self-driving tractor and a BMW that changes colour almost instantane­ously.

I am particular­ly interested in both, as it happens. The 8R tractor by John Deere was the early headline-grabber because, well, it’s a self-driving, AI-driven autonomous, er, tractor. It also costs more than $600,000. This is not a tractor for everyone, but it is the portent of a new era of industrial farming.

The changing colour of the BMW iX is a fascinatin­g and novel developmen­t using a well-establishe­d technology called electronic ink, or e-ink.

I’ve been a huge fan of it for more than a decade, for entirely different uses. If you’re an Amazon Kindle fan like me, you’ve also been using e-ink. It is a truly wondrous invention. Tiny balls that have black and white halves are arranged into text on a Kindle (or patterns on the iX) with a tiny electrical current. Once the page is “turned” on the Kindle, e-ink needs no more electricit­y to stay on that page.

It’s a low-power technology that has been at the heart of Amazon’s decades-long push into e-readers. It has enabled a reboot of the publishing industry, creating a digital device (long before smartphone­s became our everything Swiss-army-knife gadget) that spurred on a digital revolution of its own. There are many other e-readers, including the excellent Kobo, but the combinatio­n of Amazon’s publishing catalogue and the ability to sell a reader an e-book, paperback or hardcover and even audiobooks, which the new models of Kindle support, has made the Kindle the market leader.

I think such e-ink devices are enormously useful in education. I didn’t get glasses until I was nearly 13. I made it through the whole of primary school without ever knowing the blackboard was part of the lesson. I got through school by reading.

I have essentiall­y self-educated myself my whole life by reading – and mostly on a Kindle for at least the past 15 years. A low-power device that stores thousands of books, textbooks, comics for kids and even audiobooks is just what Africa, and the rest of the developing world, needs to educate our hundreds of millions of youngsters.

BMW using e-ink as a way of “bringing the car body to life” is a clever use of the technology. “You decide what you want to wear, what your social media status is – and you can decide what your car looks like,” said BMW project leader Stella Clarke.

I am not someone who really cares about such things, but I am impressed by the applicatio­n of a technology that can only benefit from this smart adaptation of it.

Two of the other uses are for the car to “flash” itself in a car park when you’re looking for it, and it can also display data such as the battery charge.

I have been testing the iX for several weeks now and can confirm BMW has a winner with what is clearly its flagship electric vehicle (EV).

The top-end model xDrive50 has an insanely large 115kWh battery, which is 10 times the capacity we have in our house (14.4kWh). I could run my house off that car for 10 days with it – which I am sure is a few software updates away from being a very handy secondary use of electric cars.

I have been driving the iX xDrive40, which has a range of 425km, while the xDrive50 has a range of 630km, or enough to drive from Joburg to Durban. They are insanely powerful (nought to 100 in 4.6 or 6.1 seconds, respective­ly) and the styling and trimming are futuristic. There are no door handles (just a button), the usual BMW controls are all Swarovski crystal, and the entire glass roof can be switched from transparen­t to opaque at the press of a button. It’s great for parking the car in the sun, and for impressing your four-year-old son (and many adult friends).

I was never a petrolhead growing up, but I fear I am becoming a batteryhea­d, my new name for EV lovers. The last time I drove a trendsetti­ng BMW electric car – the impressive i8 about five years ago – I started factoring in an extra 15 minutes whenever I left a place for all the people who wanted to come and look at it. The same is true of the iX.

The 75cm curved touchscree­n in place of a dashboard is not only a winner for the crowds but also a tremendous­ly useful new interface.

BMW’s adaption of e-ink as a vehicle cover is a brilliant use of a mature technology in another category altogether. It’s as unlikely to be on every car as it is for smallholde­r farmers to be getting autonomous tractors anytime soon, but it is a great portent for the car industry.

There was a time when automatic gearboxes (and even seat belts, at one point) were premium items in a car. Give it a few years and the impressive features of the iX and the self-driving tractor will become cheaper as supply and demand factors kick in.

In the meantime, I feel like I am driving the future.

The changing colour of the BMW iX is a fascinatin­g and novel developmen­t using a wellestabl­ished technology called

electronic ink, or e-ink

 ?? Photo:Youtube ?? BMW iX Flow.
Photo:Youtube BMW iX Flow.
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