Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Cars
  4. News

Samsung reveals sharp stretchable display that’s ready for your car’s dashboard

The 3D-style dashboard prototype expands and changes with driving conditions, hinting at more adaptive displays in future cars

Add as a preferred source on Google
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware
Samsung

Samsung Display has shown a sharper stretchable display that could make future car dashboards more flexible while keeping key driving information clear.

The company is showing Stretchable Display 2.0 at SID Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, where the demo takes the form of an automotive instrument cluster. The big change is sharpness. The micro LED-based panel reaches 200 PPI, up from the 120 PPI version Samsung Display showed last year, which puts it around the level of current automotive screens.

Recommended Videos

That matters because a dashboard can’t just look futuristic. It has to stay readable when you’re moving, reacting, and checking information quickly.

A sharper adaptive screen

Stretchable Display 2.0 uses a micro LED panel that can expand and adjust, rather than simply bending at a hinge or folding along a crease. In Samsung Display’s demo, the speedometer area changes shape based on driving conditions, giving the instrument cluster a more dimensional look.

The technical work sits in the bridge structure, which connects the fixed areas that hold the pixels and LEDs. Samsung Display says it increased pixel density inside that structure and created a new pixel layout, helping the panel maintain electrical performance while stretching.

That sharper structure is the reason the demo can show clearer text and graphics while still changing shape.

Why it matters in cars

A stretchable display could make dashboard information respond more directly to what the vehicle is doing. Instead of locking every alert, gauge, or animation inside a flat rectangle, the display area could adapt around the information drivers need most.

Samsung Display is also tying the idea to software-defined vehicles, where more cabin features are controlled and updated through software. In that setting, a changing instrument cluster could make speed, warnings, and navigation cues easier to spot without adding more screen clutter.

The missing piece is availability. Samsung Display hasn’t said when Stretchable Display 2.0 will reach production cars, or which automakers might use it.

What to watch next

The next question is whether the technology can survive the jump from an exhibition booth to a real car program. Automakers would still need proof that a stretchable dashboard can handle heat, vibration, long-term wear, and strict safety requirements.

For now, Samsung Display’s panel has the resolution and clarity needed for a more adaptive dashboard. You shouldn’t expect it in showrooms yet, but it gives automakers a clearer target for the next generation of cabin displays.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Sony WH-1000XX headphones spotted in the wild ahead of its official launch
WH-1000XX ColleXion leaks ahead of May 19 reveal with an expensive price tag
sony-WH-1000XX-The ColleXion-headphones-leak

Sony hasn't said a word yet, but the internet already has pictures of it's upcoming headphones. Actor Damson Idris was spotted wearing an unreleased pair of Sony over-ear headphones in New York City ahead of the Met Gala, giving the world its first real look at what's reportedly called the WH-1000XX or ‘The ColleXion’.

https://twitter.com/21metgala/status/2050977668712067256?

Read more
Walmart leak shows an expanding Onn lineup with a Gemini-ready smart speaker
A Gemini-powered Onn smart speaker just surfaced online
Walmart's new Onn Gemini Smart Speaker Surfaces online

Walmart’s Onn brand may be preparing to move beyond streaming boxes and cheap TV accessories. A new certification listing from the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA) has revealed an Onn Smart Speaker, suggesting Walmart could be expanding its budget-friendly device lineup into the smart home audio space.

The listing was spotted by users on the r/OnnStreamingTV subreddit, where it quickly sparked speculation about what Walmart might be planning next.

Read more
Spotify adds verified artist badges so that you know you’re listening to a human, and not AI
Spotify just made it easier to separate real artists from AI-generated music farms.
Spotify verified artist badge

In the age of AI, it is getting harder to know if the music you listen to is made by a real human or generated by an algorithm. Previous reports suggested that Spotify had no plans to label AI-generated music. 

However, it seems that the company has changed its direction on this debate. The platform is rolling out a new Verified by Spotify badge, along with additional artist activity details, to give you more context about the artists you are listening to and discovering.

Read more