Human-machine interaction (HMI) is evolving faster and more fundamentally than ever before. Users no longer think in terms of devices. They expect a seamlessly connected user experience. Touch, voice, gestures, and data streams merge into a multimodal interaction that spans cars, homes, workplaces, and even wearables. Devices communicate with each other and take on increasingly complex tasks.
Why today’s HMI development processes are no longer sufficient
For HMI developers, this shift is a major challenge. Traditional development processes are too rigid, too slow, and too isolated to enable this demanding digital future. Silos between disciplines – especially between UX design and interior design – slow innovation down.
At the same time, the requirements and range of hardware that must be supported in vehicles and other products are increasing. Different resolutions, formats, input methods, and system environments make development even more complex and resource-intensive. Many companies are already struggling to keep pace with the growing complexity of cross-device user experiences.
Incari Studio as a bridge between UX and Interior Design
The solution lies in involving designers and engineers in a shared development process right from the start. This means breaking down silos and bringing all stakeholders to the same table, even if each continues to work in their familiar environment. With Incari, HMIs can be designed, developed, tested, and adapted collaboratively.
One orchestrated user experience
This collaborative approach with Incari Studio enables teams to validate ideas faster, iterate more efficiently, and move from prototype to series production without detours. The future of HMI is no longer UX on one side and interior design on the other. It is one single orchestrated user experience – with Incari Studio as the stage where all instruments play together in harmony.