ReportWire

Tag: buttons

  • Volkswagen Reveals That It Has Brought Back Physical Buttons

    [ad_1]

    New interior photos of an upcoming Volkswagen EV reveal the company’s previously announced scheme to bring back certain physical buttons will soon be a reality. What’s being revealed is a small, budget EV called the ID. Polo that may never see a U.S. release, but the company has made it clear that this is the new button plan for its cars generally.

    As previously noted by Gizmodo, there have been rumblings for some time of consumer exhaustion around car interiors that resemble an array of tablet computers. VW is not, to be clear, issuing a full-throated rebuke of infotainment screens by adding what looks like a handful of new physical buttons to this model—and this update also addresses a totally separate problem unique to the controls on Volkswagen steering wheels—but it’s at least a fresh data point showing a greater number of physical buttons inside a car rather than fewer.

    Aspects of the company’s earlier pivot away from certain physical buttons were deemed a failure by VW itself, with design chief Andreas Mindt speaking about the issue with extraordinary candor to British car magazine Autocar. “We will never, ever make this mistake any more. On the steering wheel, we will have physical buttons. No guessing any more. There’s feedback, it’s real, and people love this. Honestly, it’s a car. It’s not a phone: it’s a car,” Mindt said.

    VW fans were annoyed at Mindt and his colleagues perhaps most of all because of confusing, non-clicky buttons that require the driver to squint down at the steering wheel to perform basic functions like changing their music volume.

    Several essential buttons that had been removed, Mindt said, “will be in every car that we make from now on. We understood this,” he told Autocar, adding, “From the ID. 2all onwards, we will have physical buttons for the five most important functions—the volume, the heating on each side of the car, the fans and the hazard light—below the screen.” According to the naming scheme laid out by Volkswagen, what Mindt confusingly referred to in this case as the “ID. 2all” pretty clearly refers to the ID. Polo.

    Kai Grünitz, whose title at the company is “board member for technical development,” said in a new press release that what’s being unveiled now is the company’s “new interior architecture, starting with the all-new ID. Polo,” and that includes “an intuitive operating environment with physical buttons and newly structured screens.”

    Elsewhere, the release notes “Separate buttons for climate functions and the hazard warning lights are integrated into a strip below the infotainment screen.”

    Uh, but: the photos also show one of those increasingly trendy non-circular steering wheels. Volkswagen has been subtly tiptoeing toward less round steering wheels for a while now, and this is another step in that dubious direction. This one’s not quite shaped like the Tesla yoke, which has been accused of being a safety risk, and it’s also certainly not the abomination shown off almost a decade ago when VW first teased the ID. Buzz. But the freshly unveiled steering wheel shape for the ID. Polo is not a circle—more like a 2-D version of the shape a volleyball takes when you step on it.

    As far as I know, consumers made it abundantly clear many years ago that they just want the steering wheel to be good (and to not fly off while they’re driving). But if you’re the one driver in the entire world who hates circular steering wheels in particular, congrats on another win!

    [ad_2]

    Mike Pearl

    Source link

  • Volkswagen is bringing physical buttons back to the dashboard with the ID. Polo EV

    [ad_1]

    We could be witnessing the start of the renaissance for real buttons in cars, courtesy of Volkswagen’s ID. Polo. The German automaker unveiled the interior of its upcoming compact EV, which features real buttons, switches and even a knob for audio controls.

    “We have created an interior that feels like a friend from the very first contact,” Volkswagen’s chief designer, Andreas Mindt, said in a press release. “Clear physical buttons provide stability and trust, warm materials make it appealing, and charming details such as the new retro views of the instruments show the typical Volkswagen wink.”

    Volkswagen

    Last year, Mindt told Autocar that Volkswagen would commit to reintroducing physical buttons for the most important functions “in every car we make from now on,” starting with the ID. 2all concept car that has since evolved to become the ID. Polo. The EV maker backed up those claims since the ID. Polo will feature tangible buttons underneath the infotainment display, along with a steering wheel that’s packed with even more clear buttons. Between the driver and passenger, Volkswagen even included a knob that can adjust audio volume or shuffle between tracks and radio stations.

    Volkswagen's

    Volkswagen

    Besides the renewed emphasis on physical controls, Volkswagen still included a 10.25-inch digital cockpit behind the steering wheel. In the center, there’s a nearly 13-inch touchscreen that serves as the infotainment system. For a retro throwback, the ID. Polo can swap its cockpit display to one that’s inspired by the classic Golf I from the 1980s through a button on its steering wheel or with the infotainment touchscreen.

    The ID. Polo is expected to be the first of four new EVs in Volkswagen’s small and compact car segment, which will see releases in European markets starting this year. However, it’s not all good news, since Volkswagen has no plans to release the compact EV in the US.

    [ad_2]

    Jackson Chen

    Source link

  • Gone for years, jazz musicians and restaurant staffers reunite to help Fort Worth chef

    Gone for years, jazz musicians and restaurant staffers reunite to help Fort Worth chef

    [ad_1]

    Ovation Restaurant gave way to Buttons Food and Music, and the jazz music never missed a beat.

    More than 30 musicians who played or sang at the much-missed west Fort Worth soul food restaurant will gather for a reunion show Jan. 31 to help pay former chef Keith “Buttons” Hicks’ medical bills.

    Tickets remained early this week for the “Buttons Family Affair Benefit,” gathering musicians and staffers from the old restaurant from 6 p.m. to midnight at the Ridglea Theater.

    Buttons changed hands and closed in 2020 after a 12-year run as a groundbreaking soul food restaurant and Sunday home-cooking jazz brunch. Hicks went on to co-found The Rim in Fort Worth and Burleson.

    For now, Hicks is hoping for a double lung transplant. He has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

    Keith “Buttons” Hicks, then chef at Buttons Restaurant and later at The RIM, in a 2014 photo series.
    Keith “Buttons” Hicks, then chef at Buttons Restaurant and later at The RIM, in a 2014 photo series. Paul Moseley Star-Telegram archives

    On a gofundme.com page seeking $50,000 in Hicks’ name is this message: “This stage of my Life has been a struggle. I am currently on oxygen and haven’t been able to work doing what I do Best, which is Cooking with Love! … ThankYou for the Prayers, Text, Phone calls and much appreciated Donations. Much Love!!”

    In an announcement, former Buttons co-owner Carolyn Hughes was quoted as saying, “For so many years, he brought so much ‘Love, Peace and Gritz’ to each of our lives and now he needs us.”

    Former Buttons chefs will cook familiar appetizers and The Rim Waterside will be among food vendors, according to the announcement.

    Chef/owner Keith Hicks puts together a Buttons brunch. The restaurant will be open for first responders and everyone else on Christmas Day.
    Chef/owner Keith Hicks puts together a Buttons brunch. The restaurant will be open for first responders and everyone else on Christmas Day. Ron Jenkins Star-Telegram archives

    Brent Johnson, founder and former owner of The Rim, said the fundraiser for Hicks “is just a small token for a man who is loved by all and a man that does not know a stranger.”

    Hicks, a West Virginia product, cooked at the Renaissance Worthington hotel, Ellington’s Southern Table downtown and the short-lived Gunsmoke Grill steakhouse on West Berry Street before the opening of Ovation, a jazz and soul food restaurant next door to the Ridglea Theater.

    He served the city’s first widely popular chicken-and-waffles along with pot roast, catfish and a variety of homestyle dishes, along with a signature shrimp-and-grits.

    For advance tickets, search Eventbrite for “Button’s Family Affair Benefit Concert.”

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Bud Kennedy is a Fort Worth Star-Telegram “Eats Beat” dining columnist and restaurant podcast co-host. In print since 1985 and online since 1992, he has written more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    [ad_2]

    Source link