Little has been said about the infotainment system other than its advanced voice recognition system and a personal assistant feature. A facial recognition system can detect who enters the car as the driver and will automatically adjust their vehicle settings. The Air will also feature a smartphone app that allows owners to see vehicle information and remotely control certain functions. Like Tesla models, the Air will have over-the-air (OTA) software updates. We have yet to hear of Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, or Amazon Alexa integration
We expect the Air to come with a long list of driver-assist tech, thanks to its semi-autonomous system called Lucid Dream Drive. Unlike the Model S, the Air will have a driver monitoring system and lidar sensor (short for Light Detection and Ranging). In addition to the lidar sensor, the Air will also come equipped with 32 sensors. These consist of camera, radar, and ultrasonic sensors. Driver-assist features include a surround-view camera, blind spot monitoring, cross-traffic protection, traffic sign recognition, automatic braking, adaptive cruise control, lane centering, headlight assist, traffic drive-off alert, and a self-parking system. At its debut, we should learn if these sensors and features will be standard or optional.