I suppose it depends where you're going to draw the line between revolution and evolution because if you're going to call moving from a dash screen to a cluster screen evolution, then
Why does everyone think the TT is the first to do this? It's not - quite a lot of other cars have TFT displays for the instrument cluster including, would you believe it, the '1990's' BMW F10 5 Series.
The TT is just the first one to show it in a television advert.
something like the F10 would register as 'totally stagnant' as it's barely changed in fundamental layout since the E39
Why change something that works? BMW tried that with the E60 and the interior was the worst part of the car. The F10 feels like a 15 year newer interpretation of the E39 which is why so many E39 lovers are so happy with the F10. Everything is in the right place, everything is properly integrated, it looks and feels like a modern interpretation of classic BMW ergonomics. I absolutely love the interior in the F10, it's one of my favourite features of the entire car.
I know I'm going to have to get used to the stupid tablet fad but it is exactly that - a stupid fad. Everyone is doing it now, which is why it looks 'modern' (if everyone decided to ship brand new cars with a selection of fruit on the dashboard then that too would be 'modern' because it'd be a feature found in modern cars), but I don't get why? What is wrong with integrated interior design that flows properly? The interior of the C Class is wonderful - then the screen ruins it.
It's just to obviously cliche - 'oh look, tablet computing is the latest trendy cool thing, lets get down with the kids and make the dashboard of our newest models look like somebody nailed a tablet to it'. The only interior it works in Merc wise is the G-Wagen because in the G-Wagen it is exactly what it looks like - an afterthought, a way to add nav to an interior designed 25 years ago when nav didn't exist
Merc have been going through an interior bad patch since the previous C Class came out in 2007 with a dash lifted straight from the Vauxhall design school. It's all the more annoying because the early 2000's Merc interiors were the complete opposite - absolutely class leading. Look at a 2003 E Class or a 2003 SL and compare it to the competition around at the time and Mercedes interiors were just absolutely excellent. Then they went all utilitarian and cheap looking and now they've gone all 'ipad'. Thankfully they've resisted ruining the S Class but how many of us can really afford one of those?
Look at the interior of Merc's flagship - the £130,000 S Class Coupe:
http://image.motortrend.com/f/roadt...ercedes-benz-s-class-coupe-interior-cabin.jpg
No stupid tablet there...