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The digital soul of tomorrow’s cars

Ruoyong (Eli) Hong
UX Collective
Published in
12 min readDec 2, 2024

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An astronaut drives a lunar rover across the rocky surface of the Moon, with hills in the background and a dark, starless sky above.
The “tomorrow’s car” (Source: NASA)

Blurry line between mobility and electronic product

A side-by-side comparison of YouTube channel pages for Marques Brownlee (MKBHD) and his car-focused channel Auto Focus
Review the car just like review a electronics (screenshots from Youtube Auto Focus and MKBHD channel)
A close-up of NIO’s AI assistant, NOMI, displayed as a black circular device with a smiling face on the car dashboard
The AI assistant NOMI, known for its loveable user experience, was introduced by the brand NIO in 2017 (Img source)

Changing priorities: what do car buyers really want?

A comparison chart showing key purchase factors for consumers of ICE vehicles and NEVs
The key buying factors are similar and the smart features are getting more weight (Source: 2023 McKinsey China Automotive Consumer Survey)
A comparative visual showing a shift in consumer priorities: previously, brand identity dominated, followed by function performance and experience; today, function performance and experience take precedence over brand identity.
Users now balance brand, performance, and experience, with a growing focus on convenience.

What should a mobility product with UX focus be like?

Designing features for scenarios, not just for premium price

A built-in car refrigerator located between white leather seats, containing bottles and cans, showcasing a luxury feature for convenience and storage.
You can find the refrigerated compartment on Mercedes S-Class or similar premium model (Image source)
A dual-purpose cooling and heating refrigerator located in the rear section of a car, designed for convenience, with baby bottles stored inside and controls for temperature adjustment visible.
Cooling and warming box, perfect for family with baby (Source: Li Auto L9)
A large built-in freezer in the trunk of a car, labeled “Big Freezer for Family,” stocked with fresh produce, beverages, and meat, designed for family convenience and outdoor activities.
For family outing and camping (Source: Onvo L60)

“It’s about considering features beyond just luxury pricing — adapting them to meet user needs.”

Excelling in fundamentals, then surprising with experiences

A graphic comparing car fundamentals like range with surprises like luxury seating and entertainment features, blending practicality with comfort.
“Tomorrow’s cars” are defined by two separate perspectives: fundamentals and surprise, which together build a complete experience that meets both practical needs and emotional desires. (Source: Li Auto L8)

Including everyday and rare scenarios: making cars for everyone

A car infotainment screen displaying options for nap mode settings, including soundscapes like “Forest” and seat-specific adjustments.
MKBHD is trying the power nap mode in Li Auto Mega (Source)
An aerial view of a car with a transparent roof driving through water, showcasing its floating or water-resistant capability.
Boat mode provides users with both the feeling and the real benefits of safety, much like airbags. (Source: WIRED)

Co-creation and user Involvement in cars

A promotional image showcasing Li Auto’s collaborative approach, highlighting user-driven features like Bed Mode and innovation through feedback.
Tomorrow’s cars should be built to evolve with the user throughout their entire lifecycle. (Source: Li Auto)

User experience guides development decisions

Guiding critical technical choices

A smartphone scanning a QR code on a restaurant card for ordering and payment, showcasing seamless digital convenience.
QR code is not the most advanced tech but the most suitable one for user in Asia (Photo by Albert Hu on Unsplash)
A graphic showcasing Li Auto’s three power modes — electric, hybrid, and fuel — and its leading sales among Chinese NEV startups in 2023.
The complexity of range extender solutions, combined with the flexibility they offer users, has helped brands achieve high user acceptance (Source)

Guiding cross-domain feature collaboration

A father and child relaxing in the back of a car, transformed into a bed mode, watching a scenic night sky on a large screen.
The Cinema Mode in XPeng P5’s v3 OS Update (Source)
A timeline illustrating the evolution of automotive architecture from hardware-defined functions in 2017 to cloud-native intelligent edge by 2030.
The architectural evolution that gets closer to what smartphones offer enables continuously updatable cross-domain features (Source)

The take aways: driving into a user-centric tomorrow

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Written by Ruoyong (Eli) Hong

Design Lead and Interaction Designer & Prototyper at Bosch. Turning emerging technology into respectful products in digital and mobility industry

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