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Insanity 21 hours ago [-]
I’m not really sure why someone would hire Ive to design a car. I don’t know much about him, but to me he’s mostly known for designing Apple products, not luxury vehicles.
Hiring someone because of their name recognition in a role they aren’t suited for would of course backfire.
(Again, maybe he does have some prior work that means he’s suited for the job and I’m just unaware)
johsole 18 hours ago [-]
Looking at the Ferrari and it's missing that certain look, styling, and tradition Ferrari's have. This design looks like a nice modern electric car, but doesn't have the wow of a Ferrari.
rcleveng 9 hours ago [-]
It's really a nissan leaf with a nicer leather interior.
biinjo 11 hours ago [-]
Exactly. Looking at it, it could be any generic unknown Chinese EV brand.
Markoff 3 hours ago [-]
it doesnt even look like nice modern electric car, maybe only by tesla 10 years old design standards, it looks way worse than Xiaomi SU7, Zeekr 001 or Porsche Taycan and let's better not mention cool retro Lancia Delta sorry I mean Hyundai Ioniq 5 or Ioniq 6 or that cute Honda e
if Ferrari wanted to make car which would look interesting for potential Ferrari owners it should have look something like BYD Yangwang U9 or Aion Hyper SSR now those are cool EV sport cars
e40 21 hours ago [-]
And a lot of people think he ruined at least some Apple products (too-thin laptops).
gopalv 21 hours ago [-]
> he ruined at least some Apple products
In my small circle of car friends, the new Ferrari is being called the "Magic mouse" of ferraris and posting memes of the car upside down with the cable plugged in at the bottom.
I was hoping for an SF90 meets Nevera when they were talking about it originally :(
But that is entirely unoriginal and derivative, compared to a designer wanting to make a mark.
Could be worse. Could be the 1998 iMac mouse of cars. (No way to tell which way it's going.)
beAbU 19 hours ago [-]
I posit that a mouse that needs to be on its back to be charged, thus rendering it completely useless during that time, to be much much much worse than a round mouse with no immediate indication which way is forward...
apparent 16 hours ago [-]
I heard they didn't want it to be functional while charging because then people would use it plugged in all the time. They wanted it to be clear that it takes a little time to charge, then you use it unplugged. Might make more sense if there were battery level LEDs on the top or something. But it's just a couple reminders and then bang it's dead.
joleyj 15 hours ago [-]
Can’t let people use it the way they want to now can we? They gotta use it the way I want them
That’s the kind of attitude that gets you laptops with no ports and keyboards that don’t work.
musicale 11 hours ago [-]
Well, my Ive-cursed 2016 MacBook Pro had 4 (!) ThunderBolt/USB-C ports, which I kind of miss (though you had to use one of them for charging, you could also charge from either side). It was both thinner and lighter than recent 16" MacBook Pro models (but with ~5 hour battery life.)
It also had a semi-useful touchbar, no actual physical ESC key, a terrible "butterfly" keyboard that was replaced twice, and a large trackpad that had terrible palm rejection until they eventually fixed it.
So mostly not great, but I miss the form factor and those 4 TB/USB-C ports. I dream about having more of them.
musicale 11 hours ago [-]
The Magic Trackpad is fine and works fine both wired and wireless.
beAbU 6 hours ago [-]
> because then people would use it plugged in all the time.
So people want to use the mouse while plugged in, and Apple designs a product that limits that...
Talk about hubris.
hyperhello 18 hours ago [-]
It takes a half hour to get months of charge back, so it’s not a functional problem. I think you wanted to have a wireless mouse with a port in the back so it feels like a wired mouse when you want it to. That would have been cool but I suspect a standard usb cable wouldn’t be rated for being continually contorted and wouldn’t be as pleasant as a wired mouse wire designed for that, so you’d need a special wire and it was just not going to work.
SpecialistK 16 hours ago [-]
Even if it is half an hour, that's half an hour of /no functionality/ - whether that is acceptable to you is a personal decision, but to claim it's not a functional problem is a lie.
My Sony wireless headphones have a similar issue. They cannot be used (with Bluetooth / ANC) when charging. My ReDragon USB mouse does not have that issue - it has a standard USB-C port on the front edge and I only need to charge it every few weeks, which is far less often than I charge a phone, so insertion cycles is not a concern.
badc0ffee 16 hours ago [-]
I had some Skullcandy bluetooth headphones I liked, and when the foam started to go, I bought the new model of the same product. The new ones instantly disconnect when charging, so you can't listen with them wired to a charger/power bank. Why???
hyperhello 16 hours ago [-]
I got a power bank that won’t give power and charge simultaneously either. Hated it.
dcrazy 14 hours ago [-]
I wonder if these are safety modifications. Batteries get hot when you charge them, which is uncomfortable in and of itself, but the added source of both thermal and electrical energy while under load might make thermal runaway situations more dangerous.
FireBeyond 13 hours ago [-]
> That would have been cool but I suspect a standard usb cable wouldn’t be rated for being continually contorted
I doubt that had anything to do with it. I've had multiple Magsafe cables that spend their entire existence in one spot on a desk (even using cable guides to keep them sitting within a few millimeters) do some bizarre "paper lanterning" of the rubber at the connector, and I'm far from the only one.
Let's be absolutely real. The port on the back would have ruined Ive's militance on sleekness and that was the reason it wasn't included. Form over function.
aurareturn 21 hours ago [-]
Jony Ive without a Steve Jobs to keep him grounded doesn't work.
From my work experience, you can't give a designer unlimited power because he/she will turn the product into an art project.
grassfedgeek 21 hours ago [-]
Not to mention iOS 7.
And the iPhone 5c which had toy-like colors and was reminiscent of Fisher-Price products. The 5c case with holes made it even worse.
rixed 9 hours ago [-]
I'm pretty confident that in such a case they just hire the name, and that people doing the actual work will be hired on purpose with the required qualifications.
arthurofbabylon 21 hours ago [-]
The hiring brand is Ferrari. Its entire business is predicated on a Paris-Hilton-style effect, whereby it is famous for being famous. Tactics like hiring Jony Ive are a common way to keep this virtuous cycle afloat. It's not really about design, it's about PR/hype/reputation/branding.
fhn 16 hours ago [-]
it's not about the design yet stock plunged 6% for no reason then?
__s 10 hours ago [-]
stock has been going down all year, drop was just bump coming back down
markets are volatile, 6% on one ticker is noise
robertnowell 21 hours ago [-]
imo the exterior looks like a cartoon BYD and should be killed with fire.
however while folks are negative on Ive for the car shape, he only designed the interiors not the car body, and the interiors are kinda lovely car interior design:
-no touchscreen (dangerous while driving)
-clicky, intuitive tactile switches and buttons
-thoughtful use of color (display base color changes based on driving mode)
I mean even just looking at those air conditioning vents (rotate vent to open/close) is classive Ive: intuitive but sophisticated.
I hope more manufacturers copy these new/old patterns on the interiors.
laserlight 21 hours ago [-]
> he only designed the interiors not the car body
TopGear reports otherwise [0]:
> In a genius move, they hired design agency LoveFrom to handle the exterior and interior execution: that’s headed by former Apple chief design officer, Sir Jonathan Ive.
the interiors are nice, but overall imo the car is a design failure.
dui0828 17 hours ago [-]
Thanks for sharing this!
stonogo 21 hours ago [-]
Is the giant rectangle in the middle of the dashboard not a touchscreen?
robertnowell 21 hours ago [-]
fair point, but it is not a tesla-style “giant iPad”
primary inputs while driving are buttons and knobs
King-Aaron 14 hours ago [-]
> imo the exterior looks like a cartoon BYD and should be killed with fire.
Honestly, if the car itself was a BYD Luce and cost $50,000, the internet would be in awe and I personally think it would be sick.
But nothing about it screams (or even whispers) half a million dollars and then some.
hulitu 8 hours ago [-]
It looks like an iPhone. They just had to raise the cam^Hboot and lower the front.
And the backlights look so original: besides 50 car brands, nobody else has this type of backlights. /s
cbdevidal 21 hours ago [-]
What prevents car manufacturers from taking a normal-looking body style and electrifying it? Seems popular with the aftermarket mods. Every hybrid and EV I can think of looks like a suppository.
Edit: I asked AI the same question and it reminded me that BMW’s i4, Camry Hybrid, Porsche Taycan, Ferrari 296 GTB (hybrid), Corvette E-Ray, F150 Lightning, and Genesis Electrified G80 all look fairly similar to standard ICE vehicles.
plqbfbv 18 hours ago [-]
> What prevents car manufacturers from taking a normal-looking body style and electrifying it? Seems popular with the aftermarket mods. Every hybrid and EV I can think of looks like a suppository.
The fact that even though an ICE engine is only 35% efficient, the energy density of fuel is still much higher than gas. Gasoline is 50x more energy-dense than an average EV lithium battery (taking a Tesla Model 3 as example). That's why you can fuel 9L of gasoline or charge and carry around ~500kg of batteries for the same range.
So in order to make the car efficient and travel 500km you have to bend the shape to be as aerodynamic as possible. That's where retractile/flush handles also come from, it wasn't just a gimmick or wow-factor on the Model S when it launched. It's still like that years later on all models because it still makes the car more efficient.
The research and push for higher densities is finally starting to pay off, so in time less efficient but more appealing/classic designs may start to emerge again, because you're less constrained by how much energy you can carry per same weight/volume.
jjtheblunt 21 hours ago [-]
> What prevents car manufacturers from taking a normal-looking body style and electrifying it?
Audi and BMW have been doing this for years at this point.
BMW i4 is a 4 series grand coupe (i.e., hatchback sedan in this case).
Audi ev suvs are super close to the gas versions. Both are shifting overlapped designs around though, perhaps specializing.
Amusingly, the eGolf that VW had to build as a compliance car is one of the better choices for “just give me a fucking car that’s an EV”.
It’s literally the MK7 Golf R, but with AWD removed and a battery instead of an engine. Physical interior throughout with CarPlay/AA, all aftermarket parts for the MK7 work with it. Drives like a go-kart on the streets.
Super fun as a second or third grocery getter if you can find one in good condition and with the right option sets.
tencentshill 1 hours ago [-]
It's in the same class as the Mini Cooper EV. Good car with a battery, not a good EV though.
jerlam 14 hours ago [-]
$30k (new in 2019) for an EV with a 125 mile range and 134 hp doesn't sound remotely competitive.
mysterydip 20 hours ago [-]
Ironically, I think your question is the reason it’s not done more often, or at least some brands make “very obvious” EV’s: because for some customers, they want people to know they’re different (and memorable) from the ICE vehicles.
jerlam 14 hours ago [-]
For the same reason, the Toyota Prius was uniquely styled and ugly - until all the early adopters moved to EVs and sales fell. The most recent model is intended for a mainstream audience and is conventionally styled like a hot hatch.
davey48016 18 hours ago [-]
I wonder if that was mostly true of early adopters, and more mainstream consumers would prefer more conventional designs.
UebVar 17 hours ago [-]
I think this is a meme in marketing departments, but not actually true.
For the longest time ICE car makers build cars that screamed "electric". They mostly where behind expectations. At that time the by far most successful EV brand was Tesla with the USP that their cars looked like cars, while the EV from the competition looked like video game asserts; the BMW EVs from that time where among the most ugly cars i have ever seen.
Now this has reversed. The current EVs from VW, Mercedes and BMW, Renault, Dacia, Fiat all look normal. The ordinary-looking BMW iX3 has a long waiting list since launch, VWs boring ID-cars are doing better than ever. Tesla has released the cybertruck that screams "electric" and is a sales disaster.
My personal conspiracy theory is that the ICE divisions wanted to prevent EVs cannibalizing their market and they pushed for ugliness or "differentiation".
People want cars to look like cars. This is tautologically true, but manufactures needed quite some time to figure that out.
SideburnsOfDoom 6 hours ago [-]
> Tesla has released the cybertruck that screams "electric" and is a sales disaster.
I agree that the cybertruck screams, but not that it has generic EV stylings.
DangitBobby 15 hours ago [-]
My cynical take for US auto manufacturers is they don't really want these cars to be successful.
seanmcdirmid 15 hours ago [-]
I have an i4 and its definitely a "conventional car body retrofitted with a battery" design. You can tell by how much leg space rear passengers have. It isn't bad though.
I definitely don't mind the new i3 (or even the old one), which are pure electric designs.
ge96 21 hours ago [-]
I used to want an electic aventador but now I'm just going for a lotus exige s 240 in chrome orange it's a sub $100K car attainable for me
dmoy 21 hours ago [-]
> What prevents car manufacturers from taking a normal-looking body style and electrifying it?
Isn't that literally what the first Tesla was? An existing Lotus chassis with electric guts?
I do think it's kinda weird that Ferrari didn't do something similar, or at least closer to that, compared to... this thing.
porphyra 21 hours ago [-]
And the original Model S proved that you can have a nice electric car that looks nice and "normal" as opposed to weird blobs of the time.
perilunar 11 hours ago [-]
> What prevents car manufacturers from taking a normal-looking body style and electrifying it?
Nothing. That's exactly what early car makers did — they took a carriage and removed the horse. Electric cars with big hoods and radiator grills is the same thing.
seydor 21 hours ago [-]
especially with older cars . would love to revive cars from 60s-80s
dylan604 21 hours ago [-]
I love the look of old cars, but there's a lot of modern safety advances sacrificed with driving around in a classic. Obvious would be modern seat belts and air bags. Less obvious are crumple zones. There's plenty of other things I'm sure that have been added in modern cars. A modern EV with the body of a 1969 Corvette Stingray or 1969 Camaro would be amazing. I'm talking modern interior materials for sound dampening and comfort like updated ACs not modern touch screen nonsense.
cbdevidal 21 hours ago [-]
I agree. Love older cars in the way they look, but I consider them only a little safer than a motorcycle.
And plenty of people drive motorcycles and old cars every day without incident. Just from a percentage basis it’s not as safe.
dylan604 20 hours ago [-]
The safety features of modern cars are more like an insurance policy where you don't think about it until you actually need it. I replaced a 2007 Corolla with a 2015 one where after just a few months of owning the car I was in a t-bone accident on the driver side. The 2015 had side impact curtains that really saved me that I cannot imagine what would have happened in the 2007 model. I walked away from that with just a couple of scrapes.
The plenty of people comment also reminds me of the sayings about airliners. It's not that there's a lot of accidents, but when they do happen, there tends to be higher percentage of fatalities.
jjtheblunt 21 hours ago [-]
These guys do just that. used to live walking distance, awesome stuff.
> What prevents car manufacturers from taking a normal-looking body style and electrifying it?
That has been done. But it's never optimal, as it's not just a case of "pull out the ice engine, put in the electric motor". Different constraints leads to a different design.
e.g. The electric motors are better mounted near the drive wheels, no "transmission tunnel". The heavy batteries are ideally mounted across the bottom of the vehicle like a skateboard, they do not replace a gas tank.
NDizzle 21 hours ago [-]
While there are some interesting design choices for things like the lights and wheels (across all Hyundai models, IMHO) the Hyundai EV9 is a pretty normal looking SUV.
gogusrl 21 hours ago [-]
The stock fell down to the price it was a SIX days ago. It was even lower at 321$ 11 days ago. Guess the guardian forgot to mention that.
Definitely some Toyota Prius vibes. They certainly should take some design risks, but not in the direction of an everyday commuter. I can only image the amount of patting on the backs the Ive team gave each other. Good job guys, on to the next project.
hkchad 21 hours ago [-]
Probably have to turn it upside down to charge it
Havoc 21 hours ago [-]
There is some chat as to why it looks like that shape below [0]. In short no engine space constraint & aiming for efficiency rather than downforce.
Nobody, and I mean nobody, is looking at owning a Ferrari for “efficiency”. They are similar to Porsche where you’re looking for a driving feel, or for the badge.
Ferrari releasing this feels like saying “our ethos does not matter”. This thing should’ve been a sports car through and through, efficiency be damned.
johnwalkr 17 hours ago [-]
I don't think this looks bad but I think this will look dated very fast. The exterior looks like a continuation of the last 20 years of car designs in general, not an update to Ferrari design. An exception is the rear-end which is a good take on the F40's rear end. A larger nod to older designs, like the modern Dodge Challenger or Ford Bronco would be nice to see. I'm sure if you talk to Jony Ive he will explain the Ferrari inspiration behind each subtle curve but it is not obviously a Ferrari at a glance.
On the other hand, it's a five-seater and an attempt to make it look more like Ferrari's iconic cars could also end badly.
The interior and interfaces look great. Even if the roundness of interior is not your cup of tea, figuring out the right balance between tactile buttons and touchscreen is really important and they might have nailed it.
sharts 10 minutes ago [-]
Bahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
throw7 21 hours ago [-]
Without the badging I wouldn't have guessed Ferrari.
hightrix 21 hours ago [-]
Agreed. This looks more like a Mustang to me.
postepowanieadm 20 hours ago [-]
Fiat Multipla.
hackerbeat 19 hours ago [-]
Very ugly car indeed. Lightyears away from the Ferrari brand.
Also, 99% of cars are ugly these days. They all look like angry vacuum cleaners.
frankdlc222 16 hours ago [-]
I’ve never really understood why electric cars need to look so visually different from gas cars. I feel like if more EVs just looked like normal, great-looking cars, a lot more people would probably be interested in buying them.
perilunar 11 hours ago [-]
I’ve never really understood why automobiles need to look so visually different from a horse and carriage. I feel like if more automobiles just looked like normal, great-looking carriages, a lot more people would probably be interested in buying them.
nine_k 16 hours ago [-]
Maybe it's the misguided fear of "cannibalizing" the sales of the ICE cars. It's based on an assumption that whoever is now driving an ICE car wants to drive another ICE car, and EVs should tap into a new segment.
Many hybrid cars, even plug-in hybrids, look like ICE cars, and don't stand out on the street. I think it's the way to go for more EV adoption.
vjvjvjvjghv 21 hours ago [-]
Looks like a nice Kia or Hyundai.
dylan604 21 hours ago [-]
the most biting comment I've seen yet
seydor 21 hours ago [-]
Divisive. there is someone who liked it?
SAI_Peregrinus 21 hours ago [-]
Johnny Ive presumably likes it.
Tanoc 17 hours ago [-]
Considering that Ferrari has been making very ugly cars since about 2004 thanks to their penchant for overexaggerating every single design feature, it's somewhat surprising that they managed to keep it up despite hiring an outsider. Even moreso that they somehow managed to do that by swinging in the complete opposite direction and simplifying everything as much as they could. The Roma and Amalfi show the design language they're currently using after abandoning the caricature that started with the F430, and yet they chose this instead.
harry8 21 hours ago [-]
It’s fine looking car.
It isn’t a fine looking Ferrari or even close.
chronolitus 21 hours ago [-]
The design says: "Look at this nice Ferrari-branded toy car! You should have one in your garage, it would look cute next to your real car (_Real_ Ferrari, gas engine, looks like a sleek lion about to eat its prey)". In that sense, it might be perfect - for a brand that's not yet certain that it can stay true to itself in a EV-only world?
nerdjon 21 hours ago [-]
As someone who is not in the market for a Ferrari, I feel like I am crazy for actually kinda liking the look of it? (The blue is bad, they should have used the red one for all of the marketing)
I mean, I feel like it should be a departure from the Ferrari look since it really isn't one that fits the expectation of what a Ferrari is. It feels like this is more an expansion of the Ferrari brand into a new segment while also borrowing from the rest of the brand?
They even said "entirely new Ferrari".
I feel like if it did try to look like a normal Ferrari but then it didn't feel, sound, etc like one due to being Electric people would also complain.
ShinyLeftPad 18 hours ago [-]
> if it did try to look like a normal Ferrari but then it didn't feel, sound, etc like one due to being Electric people would also complain
A "normal" Ferrari or any old sportscar looks cool on a race track but in real life it is literally midlife crisis on wheels, very awkward and out of place. I always feel pity/judgement when I see one. I heard it's also uncomfortable for passengers in the back and so on.
Form is function. Making this car look like something it isn't just for the sake of legacy appearance would be top engineering stupidity and waste. And trying to compete with your own ICE cars at what they are best also would not be so smart business-wise.
I'm not a car guy but this car seems to be doing something totally new for Ferrari. If there was no controversy THEN it would be worrying!
peterlk 21 hours ago [-]
I am also not in the market for a Ferrari. The problem is that it looks so pedestrian. Personally, I think the Ioniq has more personality. For a 600k car, it should have some appeal. This just looks like every other EV; it’s generic and boring.
I think they might have had much more success with a strategy like the R32 EV. Take something classic (like the Testarossa) and electrify it. Remind people that EVs are an evolution rather than a capitulation to generic boringness.
dylan604 21 hours ago [-]
> As someone who is not in the market for a Ferrari, I feel like I am crazy for actually kinda liking the look of it?
s/Ferrari/Tesla and I think we have the sentiment of any cybertruck owners
ortusdux 21 hours ago [-]
Marques Brownlee toured one recently - "Ferrari Luce is the Most Controversial Ferrari Ever"
Thanks for the link. Totally seeing the appeal of this car.
The UX seems actually very good (based on this short review so far). Good use of physical tactile controls + flexibility of a screen.
As to external looks. Whenever I see old ICE sports cars (all those lotuses, ferraris, lamborghinis) they seem so awkward and out of place on city streets. They just scream midlife crisis. I think this will be an upgrade in that sense.
NewJazz 18 hours ago [-]
Yeah but why would anyone pay $600k for a car just to not look like they are having a midlife crisis?
ShinyLeftPad 17 hours ago [-]
Some people exist in another financial dimension :shrug: Bentleys and rolls royces for example don't scream midlife crisis and this is a bit closer to that by comfort apparently
specialist 15 hours ago [-]
Its UI looks amazing. Of course, I have no clue about its IRL UX.
ShinyLeftPad 7 hours ago [-]
I have a clue about IRL UX of touchscreen only car interfaces and they suck...
apparent 16 hours ago [-]
Funny that its failure is in being too chubby, when Ive was famous for making Apple products overly thin (think butterfly keyboard).
22 hours ago [-]
roboror 21 hours ago [-]
Before I saw the car, I figured the response would be overblown like many are these days, but yikes that is really an uninspiring silhouette.
TheChaplain 20 hours ago [-]
The Ferrari Testarossa (F110) is probably the most beautiful of their line IMHO, hair-rising roar it has too.
awesomeusername 15 hours ago [-]
No one I know with a Ferrari drives it more than a few dozens of km.
wildredkraut 16 hours ago [-]
I can smell the headline "Apple acquires Ferrari".
vinni2 21 hours ago [-]
Reminds me of Homer Simpson designing a car for his half brother and making him bankrupt.
ExoticPearTree 21 hours ago [-]
The front looks very not Ferrari.
plombe 17 hours ago [-]
The design is reminiscent of a Honda e
ehoba 21 hours ago [-]
It’s just not an attractive design at all, and stat-wise it’s laughable compared to a Tesla, especially at that price point. There’s no way this sees production. If anything, this just harms the Ferrari brand.
HardwareLust 21 hours ago [-]
Holy shit is that thing ugly, both inside and outside. Hiring Jony Ive was a huge mistake.
Thank God only a few will be produced and those will be squirreled away by a handful of oligarchs and will never see the light of day.
cyanydeez 18 hours ago [-]
Looks mostly like a bloated american car. The absolute worst design standards based around SUV and Truck styles. Probably the wrong time to align with anything USA.
Am I the only one who was impressed by the interior design? But yeah, the body is ugly as hell, I think it lacks aggression in the design.
uwagar 15 hours ago [-]
kind looks like an oversized toy. man and what the heck were they thinking of using blue? jesus.
s5300 21 hours ago [-]
[dead]
saltyoldman 22 hours ago [-]
The main mistake made here is that the color is a weird sky blue. The actual shape looks great - just needs to be red.
brk 22 hours ago [-]
That is clearly not the mistake, there are images of it in blue, red, and yellow. I've also seen a couple of different styles of wheels. The design looks bad (for a Ferrari) in every iteration. The overwhelming feedback on public discussions is that it looks [cheap|terrible|boring|notFerrari].
eps 22 hours ago [-]
It looks like Hundai's homage to Ferrari.
mdm_ 21 hours ago [-]
It looks like something you put VHS tapes in to rewind them.
garciasn 21 hours ago [-]
It looks like a Lotus Elise.
layman51 21 hours ago [-]
To me, it kind of reminds me of a Lucid Motors car.
Hiring someone because of their name recognition in a role they aren’t suited for would of course backfire.
(Again, maybe he does have some prior work that means he’s suited for the job and I’m just unaware)
if Ferrari wanted to make car which would look interesting for potential Ferrari owners it should have look something like BYD Yangwang U9 or Aion Hyper SSR now those are cool EV sport cars
In my small circle of car friends, the new Ferrari is being called the "Magic mouse" of ferraris and posting memes of the car upside down with the cable plugged in at the bottom.
I was hoping for an SF90 meets Nevera when they were talking about it originally :(
But that is entirely unoriginal and derivative, compared to a designer wanting to make a mark.
https://www.nissanusa.com/vehicles/electric-cars/leaf.html
Could be worse. Could be the 1998 iMac mouse of cars. (No way to tell which way it's going.)
It also had a semi-useful touchbar, no actual physical ESC key, a terrible "butterfly" keyboard that was replaced twice, and a large trackpad that had terrible palm rejection until they eventually fixed it.
So mostly not great, but I miss the form factor and those 4 TB/USB-C ports. I dream about having more of them.
So people want to use the mouse while plugged in, and Apple designs a product that limits that...
Talk about hubris.
My Sony wireless headphones have a similar issue. They cannot be used (with Bluetooth / ANC) when charging. My ReDragon USB mouse does not have that issue - it has a standard USB-C port on the front edge and I only need to charge it every few weeks, which is far less often than I charge a phone, so insertion cycles is not a concern.
I doubt that had anything to do with it. I've had multiple Magsafe cables that spend their entire existence in one spot on a desk (even using cable guides to keep them sitting within a few millimeters) do some bizarre "paper lanterning" of the rubber at the connector, and I'm far from the only one.
Let's be absolutely real. The port on the back would have ruined Ive's militance on sleekness and that was the reason it wasn't included. Form over function.
From my work experience, you can't give a designer unlimited power because he/she will turn the product into an art project.
And the iPhone 5c which had toy-like colors and was reminiscent of Fisher-Price products. The 5c case with holes made it even worse.
markets are volatile, 6% on one ticker is noise
however while folks are negative on Ive for the car shape, he only designed the interiors not the car body, and the interiors are kinda lovely car interior design:
-no touchscreen (dangerous while driving) -clicky, intuitive tactile switches and buttons -thoughtful use of color (display base color changes based on driving mode)
I mean even just looking at those air conditioning vents (rotate vent to open/close) is classive Ive: intuitive but sophisticated.
I hope more manufacturers copy these new/old patterns on the interiors.
TopGear reports otherwise [0]:
> In a genius move, they hired design agency LoveFrom to handle the exterior and interior execution: that’s headed by former Apple chief design officer, Sir Jonathan Ive.
[0] https://www.topgear.com/car-news/electric/its-finally-here-m...
the interiors are nice, but overall imo the car is a design failure.
primary inputs while driving are buttons and knobs
Honestly, if the car itself was a BYD Luce and cost $50,000, the internet would be in awe and I personally think it would be sick.
But nothing about it screams (or even whispers) half a million dollars and then some.
Edit: I asked AI the same question and it reminded me that BMW’s i4, Camry Hybrid, Porsche Taycan, Ferrari 296 GTB (hybrid), Corvette E-Ray, F150 Lightning, and Genesis Electrified G80 all look fairly similar to standard ICE vehicles.
The fact that even though an ICE engine is only 35% efficient, the energy density of fuel is still much higher than gas. Gasoline is 50x more energy-dense than an average EV lithium battery (taking a Tesla Model 3 as example). That's why you can fuel 9L of gasoline or charge and carry around ~500kg of batteries for the same range.
So in order to make the car efficient and travel 500km you have to bend the shape to be as aerodynamic as possible. That's where retractile/flush handles also come from, it wasn't just a gimmick or wow-factor on the Model S when it launched. It's still like that years later on all models because it still makes the car more efficient.
The research and push for higher densities is finally starting to pay off, so in time less efficient but more appealing/classic designs may start to emerge again, because you're less constrained by how much energy you can carry per same weight/volume.
Audi and BMW have been doing this for years at this point.
BMW i4 is a 4 series grand coupe (i.e., hatchback sedan in this case).
Audi ev suvs are super close to the gas versions. Both are shifting overlapped designs around though, perhaps specializing.
https://www.mercedes-benz.de/passengercars/models/electric.h...
It’s literally the MK7 Golf R, but with AWD removed and a battery instead of an engine. Physical interior throughout with CarPlay/AA, all aftermarket parts for the MK7 work with it. Drives like a go-kart on the streets.
Super fun as a second or third grocery getter if you can find one in good condition and with the right option sets.
For the longest time ICE car makers build cars that screamed "electric". They mostly where behind expectations. At that time the by far most successful EV brand was Tesla with the USP that their cars looked like cars, while the EV from the competition looked like video game asserts; the BMW EVs from that time where among the most ugly cars i have ever seen.
Now this has reversed. The current EVs from VW, Mercedes and BMW, Renault, Dacia, Fiat all look normal. The ordinary-looking BMW iX3 has a long waiting list since launch, VWs boring ID-cars are doing better than ever. Tesla has released the cybertruck that screams "electric" and is a sales disaster.
My personal conspiracy theory is that the ICE divisions wanted to prevent EVs cannibalizing their market and they pushed for ugliness or "differentiation".
People want cars to look like cars. This is tautologically true, but manufactures needed quite some time to figure that out.
I agree that the cybertruck screams, but not that it has generic EV stylings.
I definitely don't mind the new i3 (or even the old one), which are pure electric designs.
Isn't that literally what the first Tesla was? An existing Lotus chassis with electric guts?
I do think it's kinda weird that Ferrari didn't do something similar, or at least closer to that, compared to... this thing.
Nothing. That's exactly what early car makers did — they took a carriage and removed the horse. Electric cars with big hoods and radiator grills is the same thing.
And plenty of people drive motorcycles and old cars every day without incident. Just from a percentage basis it’s not as safe.
The plenty of people comment also reminds me of the sayings about airliners. It's not that there's a lot of accidents, but when they do happen, there tends to be higher percentage of fatalities.
https://evwest.com
That has been done. But it's never optimal, as it's not just a case of "pull out the ice engine, put in the electric motor". Different constraints leads to a different design.
e.g. The electric motors are better mounted near the drive wheels, no "transmission tunnel". The heavy batteries are ideally mounted across the bottom of the vehicle like a skateboard, they do not replace a gas tank.
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/RACE/?guccounter=1
til ferrari's ticker is RACE !
https://youtu.be/K-o0r2zSgCE?t=2162
Nobody, and I mean nobody, is looking at owning a Ferrari for “efficiency”. They are similar to Porsche where you’re looking for a driving feel, or for the badge.
Ferrari releasing this feels like saying “our ethos does not matter”. This thing should’ve been a sports car through and through, efficiency be damned.
On the other hand, it's a five-seater and an attempt to make it look more like Ferrari's iconic cars could also end badly.
The interior and interfaces look great. Even if the roundness of interior is not your cup of tea, figuring out the right balance between tactile buttons and touchscreen is really important and they might have nailed it.
Also, 99% of cars are ugly these days. They all look like angry vacuum cleaners.
Many hybrid cars, even plug-in hybrids, look like ICE cars, and don't stand out on the street. I think it's the way to go for more EV adoption.
It isn’t a fine looking Ferrari or even close.
I mean, I feel like it should be a departure from the Ferrari look since it really isn't one that fits the expectation of what a Ferrari is. It feels like this is more an expansion of the Ferrari brand into a new segment while also borrowing from the rest of the brand?
They even said "entirely new Ferrari".
I feel like if it did try to look like a normal Ferrari but then it didn't feel, sound, etc like one due to being Electric people would also complain.
A "normal" Ferrari or any old sportscar looks cool on a race track but in real life it is literally midlife crisis on wheels, very awkward and out of place. I always feel pity/judgement when I see one. I heard it's also uncomfortable for passengers in the back and so on.
Form is function. Making this car look like something it isn't just for the sake of legacy appearance would be top engineering stupidity and waste. And trying to compete with your own ICE cars at what they are best also would not be so smart business-wise.
I'm not a car guy but this car seems to be doing something totally new for Ferrari. If there was no controversy THEN it would be worrying!
I think they might have had much more success with a strategy like the R32 EV. Take something classic (like the Testarossa) and electrify it. Remind people that EVs are an evolution rather than a capitulation to generic boringness.
s/Ferrari/Tesla and I think we have the sentiment of any cybertruck owners
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Reu1WS3BhM
The UX seems actually very good (based on this short review so far). Good use of physical tactile controls + flexibility of a screen.
As to external looks. Whenever I see old ICE sports cars (all those lotuses, ferraris, lamborghinis) they seem so awkward and out of place on city streets. They just scream midlife crisis. I think this will be an upgrade in that sense.
Thank God only a few will be produced and those will be squirreled away by a handful of oligarchs and will never see the light of day.
Ferrari Luce
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48271629
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48275386