Former Apple design chief Jony Ive reveals the interior of Ferrari's first EV

Daniel Sims

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First look: Apple reportedly canceled its long-hyped car project in 2024 after over a decade of development and a billion dollars of investment. However, high-income drivers who still wonder what the Cupertino giant might have envisioned should watch the gradual unveiling of Ferrari's first EV.

Ferrari recently revealed the name and dashboard of its first all-electric vehicle, the Luce (pronounced "Luche," Italian for "Light"). The instrument panel, designed by one of the most influential minds behind the iPod, iMac, MacBook Air, iPhone, and iPad, aims to blend modern digital sensibilities with the supercar brand's traditional analog feel.

Chief Product Development Officer Gianmaria Fulgenzi stated that the Luce is not an electric car, but rather an electric Ferrari. Despite the vehicle's touchscreen and mostly digital control system, conceived by former Apple design chief Jony Ive, it resembles a Ferrari more than an Apple car.

The steering wheel, for example, incorporates six physical dials for cruise control, windshield wipers, suspension, electric power management, and other systems. Mechanical paddles behind the wheel control torque, indicated through a digital torque meter above the speedometer.

The dials, including the speedometer and multi-function graph, combine mechanical hands with digital displays. The graph, located in the top-left corner of the center control panel, switches between a clock, a stopwatch, and a compass using two physical buttons.

Although the control panel itself is the most Apple-like element of the Luce's dashboard, incorporating a large OLED touchscreen, it still includes several analogue controls. While the display handles deep climate, media, and other controls, large physical switches along the bottom manage the primary settings. One of the panel's most unique features is the aluminum handle, used to pivot the interface toward either the driver or front-seat passenger.

The center console places a similar interface within reach of backseat passengers. Meanwhile, the shifter sits next to a dock for the rectangular key fob. Docking the fob starts the ignition. Additionally, an overhead control panel includes more torque controls and dials, while the seats offer multiple options for patterns, fabrics, and colors.

Designer Jony Ive was likely involved with Apple's ill-fated decade-long effort to develop an EV. Prior reports suggest that the company struggled to determine whether it wished to build a fully autonomous car from scratch, its own take on Tesla's vehicles, or provide a self-driving system to traditional automakers.

Ferrari unveiled the Luce's dashboard with the first in a series of three planned videos, which will culminate in the EV's full reveal and launch in May.

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It's awful. Looks like a cheap video game steering wheel set.
As for the touchscreens.... Possibly the worst invention ever to be put in a car. G-Forces, bumps and need to keep eyes on the road have shown time and again that touchscreens make a terrible UX for cars.
 
The video was a waste of time even when continually skipping through. I like EVs but that dashboard just doesn't scream sports or exotica to me. If I'd spent the sort of money I'd imagine this thing will cost then it will just remind me every day of what a bad decision I'd made.
 
Screens are cheap. They look cheap, they're tacky, and they suck compared to physical gauges for glancing at things.


Nothing separates this interior from that of a basic Chevy or Ford product.
 
Jony Ive really said I'm not letting a little thing like Apple canceling their car project stop me from designing a car anyway. Man probably had all these ideas sitting in his drawer for years and just called up Ferrari like "hey you guys want an absolutely gorgeous dashboard that costs $80k to replace if you spill coffee on it?"
 
Apple spent a decade and a billion dollars trying to figure out if they wanted to build a car, a self-driving system, or just slap an Apple logo on someone else's work, and ultimately decided on none of the above. Maybe for a reason.
 
Apple spent a decade and a billion dollars trying to figure out if they wanted to build a car, a self-driving system, or just slap an Apple logo on someone else's work, and ultimately decided on none of the above. Maybe for a reason.
Xiaomi could, they should be able as well. Although, to Xiao's advantage is world's bigger factory across the street that can build them literally anything. Apple does not have that option.
I still think Apple would make great money if they released their car.
 
Enzo Ferrari has to be rolling in his grave over that game boy dashboard/steering wheel.
Shoot, with all of that touch screen, knob/dial pushing nonsense, anyone buying one will
either run off the road or rear end someone while trying to play with all that touch screen
knob stuff. ;)
 
Lol wow, I'm sure Ferrari buyers that normally love their leather-covered AC vents and custom ergonomics designed around the driving experience are going to love the cheap LED screen sticking out in the middle of the car that all the commoners are driving. Maybe the market is changing or maybe it's time they threw in the towel
 
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