pbojanoski
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Not sure there is much new ground and it is still the pre-production version, but interesting enough and a couple of good pictures. Worth the 5 minutes if you are stuck at home!
https://www.carmagazine.co.uk/car-news/tech/ford-sync-4-how-does-it-work/
Ford Sync 4 infotainment: does it work?
Published: 13 April 2020
We canât yet tell you how Fordâs all-electric Mustang Mach-E SUV drives yet â but weâve had a good hands-on opportunity with the latest infotainment system, Sync 4, in a static Mach-E. Sync is Fordâs infotainment software, which started out as a tiny screen buried deep in the dashboard of a Fiesta in 2007, and has since morphed into Sync 3 â a decent if slightly clunky offering adorning all Fordâs passenger cars and most of its vans.
Sync 4, as previewed in the Mach-E, is a rather different offering, taking the form of a TV-sized touchscreen dominating the cabin and controlling almost all the carâs functions. The Mach-Eâs screen is half an inch bigger than the one on the Tesla Model 3, at 15.5 inches â you can almost hear the engineers in Michigan giving a big yee-haw and high-fiving one another. However, Sync 4 will work on screens from just eight inches in size, so it can be applied to smaller cars too. It will start appearing in production Fords this year.
The layoutâs a lot more traditional than Teslaâs, and with a few physical buttons round the cabin and a further screen acting as a gauge cluster, it doesnât quite take over every function. The screen itself is bright, clear and responsive, the graphics crisp â itâs a good-looking display. It has âconversationalâ voice-recognition capability too.
The interface is based around a home screen with dynamic âcardsâ â the car will learn your routine and adapt them accordingly. Drive home at 5.30 every day? Expect to see that route at the top of the nav when you get in for the evening commute. Penchant for a podcast on the morning drive? Itâll show up. In theory, this will just get better and more accurate with extended use.
You can split the display, too, allowing you to keep an eye on navigation in the top window while you choose music in the lower one, for example, although this feature isnât on sub-12-inch screens.
All very useful, but Fordâs taken another leaf out of Teslaâs book by hiding driving functions away in menus rather than having them front and centre on the home screen. Switching driving modes requires the driver to perform too many actions. Sync 4 also involves a lot of animations that arenât quite as smooth as youâd expect in 2020. Still, as a step forward itâs a big one.
Ford Sync 4: how it works
One screen, one dial
Portrait-orientated screen features a volume dial at the bottom as its sole physical control
Not dead, but buried
Driving functions are accessed by hitting the car icon in the top left â it should be bigger
Your nav or mine?
3D connected nav looks good and works well enough. But itâs just as easy to plug in your phone and use navigation app WazeâŠ
Ford Sync 4: does it work?
Yes â itâs a worthwhile upgrade that looks good and works well, although too many functions are several menus down. But the real question is whether anybody will use it, with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto providing seamless connectivity with your phone.
https://www.carmagazine.co.uk/car-news/tech/ford-sync-4-how-does-it-work/
Ford Sync 4 infotainment: does it work?
Published: 13 April 2020
We canât yet tell you how Fordâs all-electric Mustang Mach-E SUV drives yet â but weâve had a good hands-on opportunity with the latest infotainment system, Sync 4, in a static Mach-E. Sync is Fordâs infotainment software, which started out as a tiny screen buried deep in the dashboard of a Fiesta in 2007, and has since morphed into Sync 3 â a decent if slightly clunky offering adorning all Fordâs passenger cars and most of its vans.
Sync 4, as previewed in the Mach-E, is a rather different offering, taking the form of a TV-sized touchscreen dominating the cabin and controlling almost all the carâs functions. The Mach-Eâs screen is half an inch bigger than the one on the Tesla Model 3, at 15.5 inches â you can almost hear the engineers in Michigan giving a big yee-haw and high-fiving one another. However, Sync 4 will work on screens from just eight inches in size, so it can be applied to smaller cars too. It will start appearing in production Fords this year.
The layoutâs a lot more traditional than Teslaâs, and with a few physical buttons round the cabin and a further screen acting as a gauge cluster, it doesnât quite take over every function. The screen itself is bright, clear and responsive, the graphics crisp â itâs a good-looking display. It has âconversationalâ voice-recognition capability too.
The interface is based around a home screen with dynamic âcardsâ â the car will learn your routine and adapt them accordingly. Drive home at 5.30 every day? Expect to see that route at the top of the nav when you get in for the evening commute. Penchant for a podcast on the morning drive? Itâll show up. In theory, this will just get better and more accurate with extended use.
You can split the display, too, allowing you to keep an eye on navigation in the top window while you choose music in the lower one, for example, although this feature isnât on sub-12-inch screens.
All very useful, but Fordâs taken another leaf out of Teslaâs book by hiding driving functions away in menus rather than having them front and centre on the home screen. Switching driving modes requires the driver to perform too many actions. Sync 4 also involves a lot of animations that arenât quite as smooth as youâd expect in 2020. Still, as a step forward itâs a big one.
Ford Sync 4: how it works
One screen, one dial
Portrait-orientated screen features a volume dial at the bottom as its sole physical control
Not dead, but buried
Driving functions are accessed by hitting the car icon in the top left â it should be bigger
Your nav or mine?
3D connected nav looks good and works well enough. But itâs just as easy to plug in your phone and use navigation app WazeâŠ
Ford Sync 4: does it work?
Yes â itâs a worthwhile upgrade that looks good and works well, although too many functions are several menus down. But the real question is whether anybody will use it, with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto providing seamless connectivity with your phone.