Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Android
  4. News

Polestar and Google plan a smartphone-like infotainment system

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

Volvo-owned Polestar will continue working with Google to fine-tune its Android-based infotainment system. The software is found in the 2, a Tesla Model 3-sized hatchback unveiled in 2019, and it will also be available in upcoming models as the young automaker expands its lineup during the early 2020s.

Recommended Videos

An 11-inch, portrait-oriented touchscreen displays the infotainment system in the 2. Working hand-in-hand with Google allowed Polestar engineers to develop software that’s as easy to use as a smartphone. I found it feature-rich, uncluttered, and intuitive when I tried it in 2019. Looking ahead, future generations of the software will offer users a personalized and contextualized in-car experience by taking their personal preferences into account.

It’s not going to cook your favorite meal, but it might suggest a nearby Mexican restaurant if you’re in an unfamiliar area, and if you’ve looked for tacos in the past. Video streaming will be available, though Polestar hasn’t revealed its partners yet, so it could suggest new shows that line up with what you’ve watched in the past.

What if you share the car with someone who can’t stand tacos? The software will do its best not to send you to a restaurant you’ll hate by identifying the person behind the wheel using the digital key stored in each user’s smartphone. And, Polestar stressed these features will only function if they’re authorized to, so your car doesn’t have to know what you like to eat, where, and what you watch while you chow down a burrito bowl if you don’t want it to.

Many of the aforementioned features will sound familiar if you use an Android-powered smartphone. Google Assistant (which is built directly into the 2) often suggests things to eat, see, and buy. That’s not where the similarities between your hand-held device and Polestar’s electric sedan end. The screens will automatically dim or get brighter depending on light conditions, and on whether the driver is looking at them. Proximity sensors will display certain menus when one of the front passengers reaches towards the screen, and keep it out of sight the rest of the time for a cleaner look. Polestar stressed it wants to avoid creating an information overload.

Ultimately, until autonomous cars merge into the mainstream, your attention should be on the road ahead, not on the screen that pops out from the dashboard — no matter how gorgeous it might be. That’s why Polestar’s technology will emit warnings if its eye-tracking technology detects the driver is spending too much time looking at the screen.

Polestar will shed more light on how it plans to upgrade its infotainment system in the coming weeks.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
China has new EV safety rules ready. The US needs to follow in its footsteps
Mandatory battery fire protections and hard power cutoffs show what a tougher EV safety playbook could look like in the U.S.
EV

China's EV safety rules are about to make automakers prove their cars can fail safely, not merely warn people before trouble spreads.

Starting July 1, 2026, two mandatory national standards will require stronger battery safeguards and a physical one-touch way to cut high-voltage power during an emergency. The pressure points are the ones drivers, firefighters, insurers, and regulators can't brush aside for much longer, including battery fires, crash damage, smoke exposure, and rescue access after a severe incident.

Read more
Mercedes’s Chinese partner made an EV that costs under $10,000 and looks deceptively stylish
At around $10,000, the Arcfox Beta T1 has a feature list that embarrasses several $30,000 US EVs.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

BAIC, the Beijing-based automaker that produces Mercedes-Benz vehicles in China, has launched the refreshed Arcfox Beta T1 on June 16, a compact EV priced roughly between $9,200 and $11,700, depending on the trim.

It's not coming to the United States, but the fact that its most affordable version undercuts the cheapest new car sold here by roughly $13,000 and the cheapest EV by almost $20,000 deserves some attention. What BAIC has built here is a direct indictment of the higher EV costs here in America.

Read more
The world’s biggest battery maker just pumped the brakes on solid-state EV hype
CATL chairman Robin Zeng says the technology is still in lab-phase development, with mass-market deployment unlikely before 2030.
Architecture, Building, Shop

Solid-state batteries have been hyped as the technology that will transform electric vehicles, promising higher energy density, faster charging, and improved safety over the lithium-ion cells powering most cars today. But the head of the world's largest battery maker says buyers should not hold their breath.

CATL chairman Dr. Robin Zeng told Caijing Magazine (via CarNewsChina) that large-scale commercialization of solid-state batteries will not be achievable before 2030. The company has set a threshold of 1 million vehicles as the production volume required to justify mass deployment, a figure that remains out of reach for the foreseeable future. When solid-state cells do reach the market, Zeng said initial integration will be limited to premium vehicles priced above 250,000 yuan (roughly $37,000).

Read more