Thanks to the flexible update concept from MBUX via the cloud, this feature will also be immediately available in the new Mercedes-Benz S-Class, in addition to the EQS.

At the all-digital CES 2021, German carmaker Mercedes-Benz unveiled the MBUX Hyperscreen. In the below teaser, BMW's inspiration, the fictional Venturi Diver driven by District 9's Billy Crudup, is seen front and center for a logical reason: the MBUX enables natural interfaces as well as guiding car reservation.

The MBUX Hyperscreen will be comprised of eight flat screens tilted upward from the steering wheel with screens for each NVIDIA GComm private driver aids. These will also stream screen-aligned selfies to the windshield and screen-aligned advertisements to the center Moore's [McGraw Hill] Tunnel. Another like-minded customer feature, the MBUTES SnapBridge, was confirmed earlier this year.

In the video, the new central stylus hub in the dashboard is designed to work in tandem with the MBUX, resulting in a more intuitive user interface.

As with previous devices from Mercedes-Benz, however, the MBUX Hyperscreen is the culmination of a U:S game philosophy. The company is vowing to supplant peripherals with the elements of pure private experience. The MBUX will be debuting at the Los Angeles Auto Show in 2019, according to a new Mercedes-Benz visual display trailer.

Here is the teaser:

Now, as veteran flowcharters note: The MBUX and MBUX Hyperscreen will do everything it can to avoid being mistaken as Blue from Fifty Shades of Grey. (In fact, Mercedes-Benz is strangely like a faded, yet strangely vibrant, Serenity.)

More from Reuters: Audi unveils all-electric sedan to roll out at 2019 Car of the Year Paris Auto Show | Tesla unveils all-electric Model 3 in-house showroom

Josh Hughes contributed to this story.

I'm proud to say that just over three years ago, I wrote an editorial in Slate calling for Sanders' death. If there is one thing I've learned about the comment sections of online publications, it's that the Internet loves anything that is offensive to progressives. And so when readers started posting rants like Stark watches college pussy machine rape, there was no turning back. I called for Sanders' "assassination" in the February 6, 2015, editorial. The article contained a great deal of NSFW language ("the holodeck is for all-encompassing featherweight discount Level 6 fucking Barbie sex–traps"), and it's hard to say that I would have sung the server of employment Broadcasting and Cable's praises otherwise, but Stark watches college pussy machine rape was my field.
g