The iPhone's Creator Wants Fewer Screens in Your Car
There is a particular irony in Jony Ive, the designer most responsible for embedding touchscreens into every corner of modern life, now arguing that automobiles have too many of them. Yet that is precisely the thesis behind Ive's latest project: the interior of the Ferrari Luce, the storied Italian automaker's first fully electric vehicle. Working alongside industrial designer Marc Newson, Ive has crafted a cabin that deliberately emphasizes analog controls and physical materials over the sprawling digital displays that have come to define contemporary car interiors.
The Luce, whose name translates to "light" in Italian, represents Ferrari's long-anticipated entry into the electric vehicle market. While the powertrain and exterior have drawn their share of attention, it is the interior that signals a potentially significant philosophical shift in automotive design. Ferrari made the unusual decision to outsource its cabin design to two figures who made their names far from the automotive world, and the result is a space that reportedly eschews carbon fiber, the material of choice in high-performance Ferraris for decades, in favor of a glass-heavy architecture that prioritizes transparency and tactile interaction.
A Case Study in Design Philosophy
Ive and Newson's approach reflects a growing counter-movement within the auto industry. Over the past decade, automakers from Tesla to Mercedes-Benz to Rivian have competed to install ever-larger touchscreens, consolidating climate controls, navigation, seat adjustments, and even basic vehicle functions behind glass panels. The trend has generated a backlash from drivers and safety advocates who argue that touch interfaces are more distracting than physical buttons and knobs, particularly for functions that drivers need to adjust without taking their eyes off the road.
European regulators have taken notice. Euro NCAP, the organization that sets the continent's vehicle safety standards, has begun penalizing cars that bury essential controls in touchscreen menus rather than providing dedicated physical switches. Hyundai, Porsche, and Volkswagen have all signaled a partial retreat from pure touchscreen cabins in response to customer feedback and regulatory pressure. The Ferrari Luce, designed by the world's most famous touchscreen pioneer, may prove to be the most high-profile endorsement yet of the idea that digital interfaces have overreached in the automotive context.





