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An alternative to touchscreens? In-car voice control is finally good

An alternative to touchscreens? In-car voice control is finally good

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Over the past decade or so, cars have become pretty complicated machines, with often complex user interfaces. Mostly, the industry has added touch to the near-ubiquitous infotainment screenโ€”it makes manufacturing simpler and cheaper and UI design more flexible, even if there's plenty of evidence that touchscreen interfaces increase driver distraction.

But as I've been discovering in several new cars recently, there may be a better way to tell our cars what to doโ€”literally telling them what to do, out loud. After years of being, frankly, quite rubbish, voice control in cars has finally gotten really good. At least in some makes, anyway. Imagine it: a car that understands your accent, lets you interrupt its prompts, and actually does what you ask rather than spitting back a "Sorry Dave, I can't do that."

You don't actually have to imagine it if you've used a recent BMW with iDrive 8 or a Mercedes-Benz with MBUXโ€”admittedly, a rather small sample population. In these cars, some of which are also pretty decent EVs, you really can dispense with poking the touchscreen for most functions while you're driving.

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Ars Archivum: Top cloud backup services worth your money

  • We tested iDrive with its free Basic tier, which offers 10GB of storage. [credit: Jim Salter ]

If there's one rule of computing every system administrator preaches, it's to always back up important data. Unfortunately, even among sysadmins, this rule is often preached more than it is practicedโ€”backups tend to be slow, cumbersome affairs that are ignored for years until they're (desperately) needed, by which time it's often too late to get them right.

Fortunately, backups don't need to be tediousโ€”and there are plenty of relatively low-cost, consumer-friendly cloud services that make protecting your data easy. The five services we discuss in this articleโ€”Carbonite, Arq, iDrive, Spideroak One, and Backblazeโ€”are cloud-based and inexpensive, and they operate seamlessly in the background.

What weโ€™re looking for

For a backup service to work, it needs to be easy to install and use. Beyond ease of use, our preferred solution needs to be affordable and have a simple billing model. It also needs to operate reliably in the background, offer easy recovery, and provide archive depthโ€”meaning you'll have backups to previous versions of your files in addition to the current saved copy.

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