Advanced, Electrified And Tech-Heavy Cars Could Be Making Themselves Obsolete
We’re living in the digital age; of that there can be no argument. We can shop, bank and entertain ourselves without ever looking away from our phone screens. Until we change phones, that is.
Some people are good at making technology last. They can take a cool new piece of tech and enjoy it for years without feeling the need to swap it for the latest and greatest, while others always want the best and newest of everything that matters to them, whether that’s phones, video games or even cars. People with the money to do it often swap their motors every two or three years.
But in a world where technology is changing and improving every year, it’s difficult to keep the flavour of the month feeling truly current and relevant over an eight-year product cycle. Did I write ‘difficult’? Scratch that: I meant borderline impossible. Yesterday’s news about the i8’s new convertible brother got me wondering whether the i8 has, at this stage through no fault of BMW’s, already become exactly that: yesterday’s news.
Before BMW i was a thing, there was a long-running publicity campaign to raise awareness, most notably for me on the walls of the corridor joining Heathrow Airport’s Terminal Five with a convenient Sofitel hotel; a corridor most British motor journalists have walked dozens of times. When the launch of the sub-brand finally came around it was huge news. The publicity was everywhere and you couldn’t move for pictures of the i3 and i8. I’m sure that in late 2013 I saw the two BMWs more times than I saw my fiancee.
Their appeal was based chiefly on their technology, and what they achieved with it. Trademark BMW dynamics, they said, just with advanced and flexible electrification. It was a big deal, and one that was fundamentally proved correct. The i8 is a brilliant sports car and the i3 is one of the best superminis you can buy, despite being hideously expensive compared to what you’ll pay for a Fiesta.
Going back to the fact that the technological world is moving so quickly, though, it has meant that the i8 and i3 are beginning to feel almost like products of a previous dynasty, despite only coming up to their fourth birthdays. A lot has happened since then, and some of the i-cars’ novelty has worn off. Maybe we’ve seen the extremely distinctive styling a few too many times, now, and as French cars have been proving decade-in, decade out, the most distinctive styling always dates quickly.
There’s nothing BMW can really do about this, other than smoothing out the styling and making its i-cars more classically beautiful. The technological achievements the company made in developing the i8 and i3 can’t be underestimated. They are both great to drive, and for one Mr Clarkson to openly choose an i8 over the current M3 says a lot.
However, manufacturers need to be aware of the trap they’re setting for themselves. The more they market and sell cars based on their new-fangled tech, the more they risk each model feeling obsolete all the sooner, which then places more pressure on the factory to add more gadgets more quickly. From there the spiral would continue. The more emphasis there is on the latest thing, the sooner it’s no longer relevant.
The next few years will be an interesting time both for consumers and car makers. Consumers’ demand for the latest technology, both inside the cabin and under the bonnet, will only grow. Will manufacturers try to keep pace like Apple and Samsung in the annual upgrading of phone systems, or will they revise their strategies to manage the public’s expectations with outdated tech? And if they do, will people really be happy with that?
Comments
Are cars starting to become like mobile phones? Every year we have to buy a new one.
Actually I quote SONY:
Back in the days. The good days. We would make a console, lets say a PS2, and people could enjoy it for 10 years. Now we can’t make the PS4 last for more than 5 years. Hell we we started making it it was beyond imagination, 2 years later when we released it, it was as powerfull as the avrage PC. Becouse of the better technology we will make faster stuff in future. But not better quality. No becouse a videogame/console/car can’t be in a development longer than 6 months without the concept of it becoming obsolete. That’s why I’m scared of the future.
[DELETED]
I see your point and that’s why I would love Nurburgring to ban manufacturer times. Every 2nd day someone breaks the record.
[DELETED]
So car manufacturers would make the same thing every year with “innovate” features?
BMW UPDATE 1.13.4
•Added Blinker feature
•Performance and Stability issues reworked
•Added Cyan mood lighting
Update Now. Update Later
That’s why you buy used..
Well the new 7 series gets software updates on the iDrive so maybe that will be implemented elsewhere?!
Why downvotes
[DELETED]
Sooner or later all the things you know will have a life span of around two years because they get outdated. Meanwhile the world keeps on saying we should save the natural resources in the earth…
Humans are weird
[DELETED]
The i8 IS yesterday’s news. In the world of hybrid sportscars, the new NSX overshadows it. Unless BMW come up with something radical like an i8M or a small hybrid/electric sportscar, people will lose the little interest they still have.
what engine did it have?
A 1.3 or a 1.5?
Fking showoff car
[DELETED]
I never liked the new NSX because reasons. But then…I like the i8.
[DELETED]