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the sedan isn’t dead yet — BMWs Neue Klasse points to a radical reinvention for future sedans Innovations making it to production include a full-screen heads-up display and e-ink.

Tim Stevens – Sep 2, 2023 8:30 am UTC Enlarge / The BMW Neue Klasse won’t look exactly like this, but details like e-ink will appear in production.BMW reader comments 139 with BMW provided flights from Albany to Munich and back, and three nights in a hotel so we could visit the IAA Munich auto show. Ars does not accept paid editorial content.

Some car manufacturers are easing their way into electrification by taking existing products and swapping engines and fuel tanks for motors and batteries. Others are taking a more radical approach, rebooting and refreshing to take advantage of the new design flexibility afforded by electric drivetrains.

BMW has done a little bit of both, starting with the radical i3 and i8 but lately offering things like the i4 and i7, visually and conceptually quite similar to their gas-powered counterparts. For its next generation of EVs, though, it looks like BMW is committing to the reinvention approach. Meet the all-new-everything Neue Klasse.

Neue Klasse, which simply means “new class” in German, is a reference back to a line of coupes and sedans that BMW launched through the 1960s and early ’70s. These are the cars largely responsible for establishing the brand identity we think of today when we think “BMW.” With this neue Neue Klasse, BMW is reinventing itself again, this time with a focus on sustainability and electrificationplus a wild design that’s unlike any previous production car.

“You won’t find any aggressive, dystopian form language on the car because we believe, we want to all live in a bright future. You know, we all want to live with fun. I mean, the world is complicated enough,” said Kai Langer, Head of Design for BMW i.

“Emotional things, fun, love, all these things, they won’t disappear in the future, we believe. I’d rather watch Mad Max in cinema than having it in real life, right? I actually want my kids raised and living in a peaceful, bright world, right? So, we do everything we can to do so, and to do our part, to be responsible and to help to get into a better world, or preserve the good that we have and make it even even better,” Langer told me. Advertisement Enlarge / BMW made its name with sporty sedans, and the Neue Klasse aims to return to that.BMW

There have been hints, though, in BMW’s recent concepts, like the i Vision Dee and the i Vision Circular. The Neue Klasse you see here is also called a concept, however it is explicitly said to reveal what BMW’s next generation of vehicles will look like.

And that look is… interesting. BMW’s most iconic styling features, the kidney grills up front and the so-called Hofmeister kink that shapes the rear glass on the sides, are both there. However, both look quite different from previous production BMWs.

The kidneys now span the width of the nose of the car, consuming even the headlights. Those lights now feature animations, forming what BMW calls a “single interaction area” able to welcome drivers and passengers or communicate with pedestrians. EnlargeBMW

As distinct as the nose is, things get more curious at the back. Restyled tail lights sit high and wide, featuring 3D-printed insets designed to give a strong sense of depth.

Even bigger changes await in the interior. Once inside, passengers will find a distinctive, wide-open space with four individual seats. The front seats are said to mount to the floor using a single bracket, creating more foot room, while the massive, sweeping panoramic glass roof certainly gives a great perception of volume. Concept versus reality

While it’s always difficult to know just how much of a concept car’s interior will carry on to production, BMW has said that a few key elements will definitely be a part of its next generation of cars. One of those things is the so-called Panoramic Vision, a heads-up display that stretches the entire width of the glass. Advertisement Enlarge / The interior features sustainable trim materials.BMW

As previewed in the i Vision Dee at this year’s CES, Panoramic Vision will reduce the driver’s reliance on touchscreens and gauge clusters by filling the windshield with information.

However, unlike i Vision Dee, the Neue Klasse does have a traditional touchscreen. Well, it’s not exactly traditional in that it’s parallelogram-shaped, but it is at least perched up on the glass in the familiar place, within easy reach of the front-seat occupants. That’s paired with controls integrated into the steering wheel plus what BMW promises is a new level of voice interactivity and control.

Another feature carries over from CES’s i Vision Dee: e-ink. Though not covering the entire body as it did in Las Vegas, the Neue Klasse features a few small strips of the low-power, high-contrast displays integrated beneath the side glass. The e-ink shown off at CES was there to be showy, enabling the entire car to change color at the touch of the button. Here, its intent is more modest, welcoming the driver and telling them where to touch to unlock the car. Enlarge / We’re not sure if these seats will make it to production.BMW

Less flashy but certainly no less important is a promise for more efficiency and, ultimately, more range from the Neue Klasse’s all-electric powertrain. BMW says that new cylindrical cells offer 20 percent more energy density than the company’s former prismatic cells, with a goal of 30 percent more range than we’ve seen before. Mix in 30 percent faster charging and this might finally be the car that convinces people it’s time to make the EV switch.

The production version of the car is still a mystery, but BMW promises we’ll see the Neue Klasse on the road in 2025. That means this can’t be too far off from the real thing. reader comments 139 with Advertisement Channel Ars Technica ← Previous story Next story → Related Stories Today on Ars

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Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs denied bail again ahead of sentencing

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Sean 'Diddy' Combs denied bail again ahead of sentencing

Sean “Diddy” Combs has been denied bail ahead of his sentencing on prostitution-related charges.

Judge Arun Subramanian said the hip-hop mogul had failed to show sufficient evidence he is not a flight risk and also cited admissions of previous violence made during his trial.

Combs, 55, has been in prison since his arrest in September last year.

During a two-month trial, jurors heard allegations that he had coerced former girlfriends, including singer and model Cassie Ventura, into having drug-fuelled sex marathons with male sex workers, while he watched and filmed them.

Sean "Diddy" Combs reacts after verdicts are read of the five counts against him, during Combs' sex trafficking trial in New York City, New
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Diddy fell to his knees after the verdict was delivered last month. Pic: Reuters/ Jane Rosenberg

In July, he was found guilty of two counts of transportation for prostitution – but cleared of more serious charges of racketeering conspiracy and sex-trafficking, which carried potential life sentences.

The rapper’s legal team hailed this a “victory” and immediately applied for bail ahead of sentencing, citing his acquittal on the top charges.

After this was denied, they submitted another application last week. Judge Subramanian has now rejected the request again.

In denying the motion for bail, the judge found Combs had failed to show sufficient evidence to counter arguments he is a flight risk, writing in a court filing: “Increasing the amount of the bond or devising additional conditions doesn’t change the calculus given the circumstances and heavy burden of proof that Combs bears.”

Read more:
How the trial unfolded
The rise and fall of Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs

U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian gives legal instructions to the jury, during Sean "Diddy" Combs' sex trafficking trial in New York City
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Judge Arun Subramanian heard Diddy’s trial and will also sentence the rapper

He also found that an argument by the music star’s legal team that the squalor and danger of the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC), where he is being held, did not warrant release.

“The public outcry concerning these conditions has come from all corners,” the judge wrote. “But as Combs acknowledges, MDC staff has been able to keep him safe and attend to his needs, even during an incident of threatened violence from an inmate.”

As well as Combs’s bail application, his legal team has also filed a motion calling for him to be acquitted or given a new trial on the prostitution-related charges only.

The judge has not yet responded to this application.

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How the Diddy trial unfolded

How long could Diddy be jailed for?

Combs is due to be sentenced on 3 October and could be sentenced to up to 20 years in prison.

Discussions on sentencing guidelines which followed the jury’s verdict suggest it is unlikely he will be jailed for this long, with an estimate of around two to five years, taking into account time already served.

However, it is ultimately up to Judge Arun Subramanian to decide the rapper’s punishment.

On Friday, Donald Trump was asked during an interview about a potential pardon for Combs following speculation about the issue.

The president said it was unlikely, adding that the rapper was “very hostile” during his presidential campaign.

Combs, who co-founded Bad Boy Records and launched the career of the late Notorious BIG, was for decades a huge figure in pop culture – a Grammy-winning hip-hop artist and business entrepreneur, who presided over an empire ranging from fashion to reality TV.

As well as the criminal conviction, he is also facing several civil lawsuits.

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BP raises prospect of more job losses as AI drives efficiency

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BP raises prospect of more job losses as AI drives efficiency

BP has signalled an accelerated effort to bring down costs ahead, refusing to rule out further job losses as artificial intelligence (AI) technology helps drive efficiencies.

The company, which revealed in January that it was to axe almost 8,000 workers and contractors globally as part of a cost-cutting plan, said alongside its second quarter results that it was to review its portfolio of businesses and examine its cost base again.

Money latest: Aldi ‘loses cheapest supermarket title’

BP is under pressure to grow profitability and investor value through a shareholder-driven refocus on oil and gas revenues.

Just 24 hours earlier, the company revealed progress through its largest oil and gas discovery, off Brazil’s east coast, this century.

BP said it was exploring the creation of production facilities at the site.

It has made nine other exploration discoveries this year.

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BP’s share price has lagged those of rivals for many years – a trend that investors have blamed on the now-abandoned shift to renewable energy that began under former boss Bernard Looney.

BP interim CEO Murray Auchincloss, takes part in a panel during the ADIPEC, Oil and Energy exhibition and conference in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Monday Oct. 2, 2023. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)
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BP boss Murray Auchincloss is facing shareholder pressure to grow profitability

His replacement, Murray Auchincloss, has reportedly come under shareholder pressure to slash costs further, with the Financial Times reporting on Monday that activist investor Elliott was leading that charge based on concerns over high contractor numbers.

Mr Auchincloss said on Tuesday that AI was playing a leading role in bolstering efficiency across the business.

In an interview with Sky’s US partner CNBC, he said: “We need to keep driving safely to be the very best in the sector we can be, and that’s why we’re focused on another review to try to drive us towards best in class… inside the sector, and technology plays a huge part in that.

“Just technology is moving so fast, we see tremendous opportunity in that space. So it’s good for all seasons to drive cost discipline and capital discipline into the business. And that’s what we’re focused on.”

When contacted by Sky News, a BP spokesperson suggested the company had no plans for further job losses this year and could not speculate beyond that ahead of the conclusions of the new cost review.

BP reported a second quarter underlying replacement cost profit of $2.4bn, down 14% on the same period last year but well ahead of analyst forecasts of $1.8bn. Much of the reduction was down to lower comparable oil and gas prices.

It moved to reward investors with a 4% dividend increase and maintained the pace of its share buyback programme at $750m for the quarter.

BP said it was making progress in driving shareholder value through both its operational return to oil and gas investment and cost reductions, which stood at $1.7bn over the six months.

Shares, up 3% over the year to date ahead of Tuesday’s open, were trading 2% higher in early dealing.

Derren Nathan, head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown, said of the company’s figures: “Production increases, strong results from trading activities, favourable tax rates, and better volumes and margins downstream all played their part.

“It’s also upping the ante when it comes to exploration and development, culminating in this week’s announcement of an oil find at the offshore Brazilian prospect Bumerangue.

“Its drilling rig intersected a staggering 500m of hydrocarbons. Taking into account the acreage of the block, it’s given BP the confidence to declare the largest discovery in 25 years.”

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Russia weighs into U.S.-India tariff spat, saying New Delhi can choose its own trade partners

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Russia weighs into U.S.-India tariff spat, saying New Delhi can choose its own trade partners

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin bids farewell to India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi following their meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia July 9, 2024. 

Gavriil Grigorov | Via Reuters

Russia on Tuesday weighed into the growing spat between India and the U.S., with the Kremlin saying New Delhi is free to choose its own trading partners.

Washington and India’s leadership are at loggerheads over imports of Russian oil, with U.S. President Donald Trump threatening New Delhi with much steeper tariffs if it continues to purchase the commodity from Russia.

The Kremlin, an important trading partner of India’s and one which had stayed silent as the spat erupted in the last few days, commented that Trump’s tariff threats are “attempts to force countries to stop trade relations with Russia.”

“We do not consider such statements to be legitimate,” Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov continued, speaking to reporters Tuesday.

“We believe that sovereign countries should have, and have the right to choose their own trade partners, partners in trade and economic cooperation. And to choose those trade and economic cooperation regimes that are in the interests of a particular country.”

The dispute between Trump and New Delhi is being closely watched by investors after Trump threatened on Monday that he would be “substantially raising” the tariffs on India, although he did not specify the level of the higher tariffs. The president had threatened a 25% duty on Indian exports, as well as an unspecified “penalty” last week.

He also accused India of buying discounted Russian oil and “selling it on the Open Market for big profits.”

India hit back at the U.S. later on Monday, accusing it and the European Union of hypocrisy.

“It is revealing that the very nations criticizing India are themselves indulging in trade with Russia. Unlike our case, such trade is not even a vital national compulsion [for them],” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Western countries have used sanctions and import restrictions as a way to stifle Moscow’s oil export-generated revenues that fund its war machine against Ukraine. However, some of Russia’s trading partners, particularly India and China, have continued their purchases of discounted Russian crude that their economies largely rely on.

India and Russia’s trade relationship has grown since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022; Russia became India’s leading oil supplier after the war began, with imports increasing from just under 100,000 barrels per day before the invasion — 2.5% of total imports — to more than 1.8 million barrels per day in 2023 — 39% of overall imports, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said earlier this year.

— CNBC’s Lim Hui Jie contributed reporting to this story.

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