Month: August 2024

The iPhone 16 Is Getting an Action Button: Here’s Everything It Will Do

Apple’s upcoming iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus models are widely expected to inherit the Action button first seen on last year’s iPhone 15 Pro models. The Action button replaces the traditional Ring/Silent switch – a staple of the iPhone since it launched in 2007. For users unfamiliar with the Action button, here’s a rundown of its functions – including some new features that iOS 18 will bring to the table for all iPhone models with an Action button.

The Action button replaces the single-function switch used to toggle between ring and silent, offering additional options so users can choose between quickly accessing the camera or flashlight, activate Voice Memos, Focus modes, Translate, and accessibility features like Magnifier. Users can also associate it with Shortcuts for more options.
iPhone 15 Pro: How to Customize the Action Button
iPhone 15 Pro: How to Assign Two Functions to the Action Button
A press-and-hold gesture with fine-tuned haptic feedback and visual cues in the Dynamic Island ensure the new Action button launches the intended action, which users can customize in Settings and assign to different actions.

Existing Action Button Functions
Here’s what the Action button can be programmed to do:
Accessibility: Access to various accessibility settings, such as VoiceOver, Zoom, AssistiveTouch, Live Speech, and more.
Shortcuts: Open your favorite app, or run a shortcut created in or downloaded from the Shortcuts app, such as sending a message, playing a playlist, or controlling smart home devices.
Silent Mode: Like the Ring/Silent switch on existing iPhone models, toggle silent mode on or off, which will mute or unmute the ringer and alerts.
Camera: Take a photo, selfie, video, portrait, or portrait selfie with a single press of the Action button.
Flashlight: Turn on or off the flashlight on the back of the device.
Focus: Activate or deactivate a Focus mode.
Magnifier: Activate the Magnifier app to use the iPhone’s camera as a magnifying glass to zoom in on small text or objects.
Translate: Launch the Translate app and start a conversation or text translation with a single press of the Action button.
Voice Memos: Start or stop recording a voice memo with the Voice Memos app.

New Action Button Functions Coming in iOS 18
iOS 18 allows the Action button to be assigned to one of the dozens of controls available in the new Control Center gallery, allowing the Action button to invoke Dark Mode, Airplane Mode, Personal Hotspot, and more.

Available Control Center actions in iOS 18 will include:

Calculator
Stopwatch
Alarm
Home
Timer
Dark Mode
Scan Code
Airplane Mode

Cellular Data
Personal Hotspot
Dark Mode
Quick Note
Remote
Wallet
Tap to Cash
Ping My Watch

These new options are in addition to the actions that were already available for the Action button on iOS 17, including Ring/Silent, Do Not Disturb, Camera, Flashlight, Voice Memo, Magnifier, Translate, Shortcut, and Accessibility. Some of the new Control Center options were already possible with the Shortcut or Accessibility options.

Multiple rumors have suggested that all the iPhone 16 models will also have an all-new button that’s designed to make it easier to capture photos when the devices are held in landscape mode. Check out our dedicated article on the subject to learn more about what it will do. Apple is expected to announce the new iPhone 16 lineup next month.Related Roundup: iPhone 16Tag: Action ButtonThis article, “The iPhone 16 Is Getting an Action Button: Here’s Everything It Will Do” first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Apple’s upcoming iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus models are widely expected to inherit the Action button first seen on last year’s iPhone 15 Pro models. The Action button replaces the traditional Ring/Silent switch – a staple of the iPhone since it launched in 2007. For users unfamiliar with the Action button, here’s a rundown of its functions – including some new features that iOS 18 will bring to the table for all iPhone models with an Action button.

The Action button replaces the single-function switch used to toggle between ring and silent, offering additional options so users can choose between quickly accessing the camera or flashlight, activate Voice Memos, Focus modes, Translate, and accessibility features like Magnifier. Users can also associate it with Shortcuts for more options.

iPhone 15 Pro: How to Customize the Action Button

iPhone 15 Pro: How to Assign Two Functions to the Action Button

A press-and-hold gesture with fine-tuned haptic feedback and visual cues in the Dynamic Island ensure the new Action button launches the intended action, which users can customize in Settings and assign to different actions.

Existing Action Button Functions

Here’s what the Action button can be programmed to do:

Accessibility: Access to various accessibility settings, such as VoiceOver, Zoom, AssistiveTouch, Live Speech, and more.

Shortcuts: Open your favorite app, or run a shortcut created in or downloaded from the Shortcuts app, such as sending a message, playing a playlist, or controlling smart home devices.

Silent Mode: Like the Ring/Silent switch on existing iPhone models, toggle silent mode on or off, which will mute or unmute the ringer and alerts.

Camera: Take a photo, selfie, video, portrait, or portrait selfie with a single press of the Action button.

Flashlight: Turn on or off the flashlight on the back of the device.

Focus: Activate or deactivate a Focus mode.

Magnifier: Activate the Magnifier app to use the iPhone’s camera as a magnifying glass to zoom in on small text or objects.

Translate: Launch the Translate app and start a conversation or text translation with a single press of the Action button.

Voice Memos: Start or stop recording a voice memo with the Voice Memos app.

New Action Button Functions Coming in iOS 18

iOS 18 allows the Action button to be assigned to one of the dozens of controls available in the new Control Center gallery, allowing the Action button to invoke Dark Mode, Airplane Mode, Personal Hotspot, and more.

Available Control Center actions in iOS 18 will include:

Calculator

Stopwatch

Alarm

Home

Timer

Dark Mode

Scan Code

Airplane Mode

Cellular Data

Personal Hotspot

Dark Mode

Quick Note

Remote

Wallet

Tap to Cash

Ping My Watch

These new options are in addition to the actions that were already available for the Action button on iOS 17, including Ring/Silent, Do Not Disturb, Camera, Flashlight, Voice Memo, Magnifier, Translate, Shortcut, and Accessibility. Some of the new Control Center options were already possible with the Shortcut or Accessibility options.

Multiple rumors have suggested that all the iPhone 16 models will also have an all-new button that’s designed to make it easier to capture photos when the devices are held in landscape mode. Check out our dedicated article on the subject to learn more about what it will do. Apple is expected to announce the new iPhone 16 lineup next month.

Related Roundup: iPhone 16

This article, “The iPhone 16 Is Getting an Action Button: Here’s Everything It Will Do” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

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Volkswagen’s electric ID Buzz van will start at $59,995 in the US

Photo: Volkswagen

Volkswagen has taken one of the final steps toward delivering the ID Buzz in the US by announcing pricing, battery range, and initial options available at launch later this year. The ID Buzz will start at $59,995 for a Pro S model that comes standard with RWD and, crucially, seven seats, as it’s the bigger, long-wheelbase version previously confirmed for the American market.
The 2025 ID Buzz now has a finalized EPA-estimated range of 234 miles for RWD models and 231 miles on the 4Motion AWD ones — well under some expected guesses of 300 or so miles on a single charge for a vehicle that has a sizable 91kWh battery.

The next model up is the Pro S Plus, which starts at $63,495 for RWD with bench seating standard and $67,995 for AWD, which only comes in the six-seat configuration with captain chairs. Plus, it gets you premium features, including a heads-up display, “Area View” surround cameras for easy parking, a 700-watt Harman Kardon sound system with 14 speakers, and easy open and close on the dual power sliding rear doors.

There’s also a launch-only first-edition model that starts at $65,495 with RWD (five seats) and $69,995 with AWD (six seats), both with a standard special dune interior package and several two-tone exterior color options that have candy white on top and the rest in cabana blue, orange, green, and more. The first edition is based on the Pro S trim but includes special 20-inch wheels, roof rail crossbars, special badging, easy doors, the better audio system, and an electrochromic panoramic glass roof (also available on the Plus).

Photo: Volkswagen

Volkswagen has taken one of the final steps toward delivering the ID Buzz in the US by announcing pricing, battery range, and initial options available at launch later this year. The ID Buzz will start at $59,995 for a Pro S model that comes standard with RWD and, crucially, seven seats, as it’s the bigger, long-wheelbase version previously confirmed for the American market.

The 2025 ID Buzz now has a finalized EPA-estimated range of 234 miles for RWD models and 231 miles on the 4Motion AWD ones — well under some expected guesses of 300 or so miles on a single charge for a vehicle that has a sizable 91kWh battery.

The next model up is the Pro S Plus, which starts at $63,495 for RWD with bench seating standard and $67,995 for AWD, which only comes in the six-seat configuration with captain chairs. Plus, it gets you premium features, including a heads-up display, “Area View” surround cameras for easy parking, a 700-watt Harman Kardon sound system with 14 speakers, and easy open and close on the dual power sliding rear doors.

There’s also a launch-only first-edition model that starts at $65,495 with RWD (five seats) and $69,995 with AWD (six seats), both with a standard special dune interior package and several two-tone exterior color options that have candy white on top and the rest in cabana blue, orange, green, and more. The first edition is based on the Pro S trim but includes special 20-inch wheels, roof rail crossbars, special badging, easy doors, the better audio system, and an electrochromic panoramic glass roof (also available on the Plus).

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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 Slim may switch to a titanium frame

The rumoured slimmed-down foldable could follow in the footsteps of the Galaxy S24 Ultra and iPhone 15 Pro by opting for a titanium frame.

The rumoured Galaxy Z Fold 6 Slim may follow in the footsteps of the flagship Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra by switching to a titanium frame.

The Elec reported Samsung has yet to decide between titanium and stainless steel for the potential new addition to its foldables lineup, but has completed development of a titanium backplate.

Switching to titanium – the material of the moment for top-tier phones – may help Samsung to present the Slim model as a premium device, countering rumours that the S Pen won’t be supported.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is the latest foldable from the company to use carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) in its backplate. As Android Authority reports, metal backplates were dropped with the Galaxy Z Fold 3, as they can interfere with S Pen recognition.

A titanium backplate would place the Slim alongside flagships like the Galaxy S24 Ultra and iPhone 15 Pro, at least construction wise. However, The Elec notes that the while the metal is strong and light, it is harder to work with.

Rumours of a new Slim model in the Galaxy Z Fold range have been circulating online for months, with some claiming a folded thickness of just 7.7mm. The Elec’s latest report offers a slightly thicker estimate of 11mm, complimenting an 8-inch internal screen and 6.5-inch external screen.

In any case, US and European fans may need to hold tight. Sources such as GSMArena, Phone Arena, and Tom’s Guide have all suggested a limited or regional release, with South Korea and China tipped as the most likely markets. 

Of course, all of the above is based on rumours, and it’ll be up to Samsung to announce the definitive details.

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Chipmaker Microchip Technology confirms cyberattack which hit operations

Signs all point to assault being a ransomware attack, but so far no actors have assumed responsibility.

Microchip Technology has confirmed suffering a cyberattack which forced the company to suspend some of its operations.

While the details are scarce, the information available all points to this being a ransomware attack.

The company’s customer base counts more than 120,000 organizations all over the world. These organizations work in different industries, such as automotive, industrial, consumer electronics, aerospace, and communications.

Shutting down the infrastructure

In an 8-K form filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) earlier this week, Microchip said it detected “potentially suspicious activity” on August 17, which involved its IT systems. Two days later, it determined an unauthorized party disrupted the company’s use of certain servers and some business operations, leading to the shutdown of some parts of the IT infrastructure:

“The company promptly took additional steps to address the incident, including isolating the affected systems, shutting down certain systems, and launching an investigation with the assistance of external cybersecurity advisors,” the form reads.

“As a result of the incident, certain of the company’s manufacturing facilities are operating at less than normal levels, and the company’s ability to fulfill orders is currently impacted.”

The filing concludes that the investigation is ongoing and that all details are not yet known. However, companies that are forced to shut down parts of their infrastructure do so because of ransomware. At press time, no threat actors have assumed responsibility for the attack, so we will either have to wait for confirmation, or for sensitive data to leak on the dark web.

Microchip Technology is a major American semiconductor company specializing in the design and manufacturing of microcontrollers, mixed-signal, analog, and Flash-IP integrated circuits. Established in 1987, it operates a diverse portfolio of 8-bit, 16-bit, and 32-bit microcontrollers, as well as memory devices, wireless and wired connectivity products, power management solutions, and development tools.

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Sorry, Sonos fans – the old app isn’t coming back because it’s too buggy, ironically

Sonos’s app fiasco shows no signs of ending as the firm rules out resurrecting its older app

If the Sonos 2024 app update were a new car launch, by now it would have run over a whole bunch of puppies, taken out a bus shelter full of seniors and slammed into the local orphanage, bursting into flames and taking the building with it. Just last week Sonos admitted that it was considering bringing back its older app, S2, as a stopgap measure while it continued to fix the newer app, which it launched in May 2024. But in a Reddit AMA, CEO Patrick Spence says that option is now off the table.

Spence was posting on r/sonos , where he said that “Everything has been on the table in terms of finding the fastest path to fixing your systems. In fact, until very recently I’d been hopeful that we could re-release the old app (S2) as an alternative for those of you that are having issues that we’ve not yet resolved.” 

But having investigated the idea in detail, the company has concluded that it isn’t doable – and the reason it isn’t doable is because of, er, Sonos.

Why can’t Sonos bring its old app back?

As Spence explains, “Sonos is not just the mobile app, but software that runs on your speakers and in the cloud too.” And that software and cloud has been changed since the new app was launched, which has affected the old app “to the point where today S2 is less reliable & less stable than what you remember. After doing extensive testing we’ve reluctantly concluded that re-releasing S2 would make the problems worse, not better. I’m sure this is disappointing. It was disappointing to me.”

In fairness to Sonos, people who remember S2 as a golden age of app reliability and stability are perhaps misremembering: when the new Sonos app leaked in April 2024, we hoped that it “might just fix the S2 app’s many problems”. As we said back then, “For some people on the internet, this update has been a long time coming. The Verge shared links to posts from the Sonos subreddit of people complaining about how terrible the S2 app is.”

It’s a moot point, though: S2 isn’t coming back, and Sonos will continue with its fortnightly update program to fix bugs and resurrect missing features. You can see the roadmap for app updates on the Sonos website here.

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VW has finally announced ID. Buzz pricing—it’s better than we expected

Range tops out with $70K AWD 1st Edition. Deliveries happen later this year.

Enlarge / Eight years after the concept first wowed crowds, the Volkswagen ID. Buzz is ready to go on sale in the US. (credit: James Lipman/VW)

If it feels like many years since you first saw Volkswagen’s retro electric microbus, the ID. Buzz, you’re not wrong. It’s surprisingly aptly named; I can’t think of another car during the past decade that has aroused so much interest among people who don’t usually care about four-wheeled transport. Nearly eight years after the concept made its debut, the Buzz is on sale in Europe and has been for a year. Now it’s time for America to get its turn, with deliveries starting later this year.

We drove the Euro-spec Buzz almost two years ago, but it’s fair to say the version that’s coming to the US is a better proposition. The Buzz we drove had a shorter wheelbase, a smaller-capacity battery, and seats only for five, and if you sat in the back, there was no ventilation, and the windows couldn’t be opened.

The US market will only receive the longer-wheelbase Buzz, which adds about 10 inches (250 mm) between the axles. This adds room for a third row of seats, making it a proper seven-seater. It should be a bit more humane sitting in the back, as there are air vents—we’re waiting to drive it to find out if any windows open back there.

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How Your Smart Thermostat Can Join a Virtual Power Plant

VPPs offer ways to help support the grid while earning credits or reducing your power bills. Here’s how smart thermostats work with them.

VPPs offer ways to help support the grid while earning credits or reducing your power bills. Here’s how smart thermostats work with them.

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Experts Say These Smart Security Upgrades Add the Most Home Value

Giving your smart home security a boost can also make it easier to sell a house: Here’s what works best and why.

Giving your smart home security a boost can also make it easier to sell a house: Here’s what works best and why.

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Lucid CEO calls EV market softness ‘a temporary blip’ and says hybrids are a dead end

Lucid Motors CEO Peter Rawlinson demonstrating the Gravity SUV’s front trunk seating. | Image: Tim Stevens

Different brands do different things under the hoods of their EVs. Some fill that space with inverters and high-voltage cabling. Others carve out a cubby of extra storage, the frunk that many EV aficionados demand but few actually use.
With the Gravity SUV, Lucid is taking the frunk option a step further, creating a space that can be used as a seat. I confess, I thought it was a gimmick, but sitting in that frunk is surprisingly comfortable. It’s a bit cozy for two adults, as I found when Lucid CEO Peter Rawlinson joined me, but we fit just fine.
The Gravity is no longer a concept
Rawlinson was representing Lucid at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, where the Gravity was situated on the so-called “Concept Lawn,” just a few feet from the main event. That’s a bit of a misnomer, though, as the Gravity is no longer a concept. After years of anticipation, it’s finally becoming a reality.
“I had the honor, the privilege of driving the very first pre-production car off the production line in Casa Grande just a couple of weeks ago,” Rawlinson told me. That SUV, and others that follow, are going through verification now.

Image: Lucid
Lucid Gravity.

The electric Gravity SUV is the follow-up to the Air sedan, Lucid’s first (and so far, only) vehicle. Launched in 2021, the Air set a standard for range that has improved in the years since, now scoring 516 miles on a single charge in the $110,900 Grand Touring trim. Meanwhile, the $69,900 Air Pure has an efficiency rating of five miles per kWh and will get an estimated 420 miles of range from an 84kWh battery pack, making it one of the most efficient production EVs in the world.
With the Gravity launching into an increasingly skeptical market, Rawlinson sees this level of market-leading efficiency and continued performance as something of an antidote.
However, the market is carrying some extra turbulence thanks to the political posturing surrounding EVs. Rawlinson declined to weigh in on the political state of affairs. “I’m completely independent in terms of political viewpoint, really agnostic,” he said, before adding, “Unlike someone else, who’s clearly distracted with politics.”
Elon Musk jabs aside, Rawlinson said that reducing climate change is a strong motivator for his company and that any softness the EV market is experiencing now is short term.
“I’m completely independent in terms of political viewpoint, really agnostic.”
“I think we’re seeing a temporary blip. I think any talk of retrenchment into hybrids is a blind alley. I think hybrids offer the worst of all,” he said. Rawlinson also pointed at dealerships full of “underwhelming EVs,” a refrain echoed by the company’s senior vice president of design and brand, Derek Jenkins.
“A lot of EVs have been rushed to market with rather mediocre experiences, and I think that’s also affecting the overall perception of the category,” Jenkins said. “Long term, obviously, EV is the future. No question in my mind.”
But while the competition is getting stronger, on the premium EV side, the specter of excessive depreciation is slowing some buyers down. That the three-year-old Air still offers industry-leading range, Rawlinson says, will help Lucid’s cars buck that trend.
Still, the Air is a sedan in an SUV market, a problem the Gravity is designed to fix. Offering 440 miles of range and seating for seven (or eight, if you include the frunk seat) at a price somewhere under $80,000, the full-size SUV certainly offers compelling numbers. But Rawlinson’s primary targets are less about digits and more about performance.
“A lot of EVs have been rushed to market with rather mediocre experiences”
“The benchmark is Porsche Cayenne, Lamborghini Urus,” Rawlinson said. “It’s got more legroom than an Escalade. It’s got seven feet of flat loading area. So it’s got the practicality which is unprecedented here.”
The Air sedan also offers a combination of big speed and legroom, but it’s had some big problems, too. The sedan has seen 12 recalls and over 70 software updates since its release. Check owner groups and forums, and you’ll find endless complaints of glitches ranging from the mundane (touchscreens that won’t respond) to the more significant (doors that won’t unlock).
“There’s been a big learning curve with Air,” Jenkins said, lessons that will be applied to the Gravity, hopefully ensuring it comes out of the gate with a significant leg up over its predecessor.
There were lessons learned in manufacturing the Air, too. “We simplified even obvious things like… making closures and the openings of the vehicle easier to align and assemble,” he said.
This desire to simplify and streamline forced the Gravity design team to focus on design purity. “I’m proud of the Air interior, but I feel like here [with the Gravity] we managed to get even more minimalist and yet keep it warm and elegant, which is always my goal,” Jenkins said.
This desire to simplify and streamline forced the Gravity design team to focus on design purity
With the Gravity SUV, Rawlinson said he hopes to access a market six times bigger than the Air. Lucid says it’s on target to produce 9,000 of the sedans this year, having set new sales records in both Q1 and Q2. Still, deliveries are short of the company’s previous estimates of 10,000 per year.
Six times that from sales of the Gravity will substantially boost the company’s bottom line, but to go truly mainstream, Lucid will need to continue further down-market. There’s a plan for that, which Jenkins calls “the mid-size program.”
Lucid has a series of more affordable models in the works, with prices starting under $50,000 and planned availability in 2026. One is positioned squarely after the Tesla Model 3. Another predictably targets the world’s bestselling car, the Model Y, but Jenkins says there are more interesting things to come: “Then you’re going to see us move into a little bit more ruggedized category, which I think will be a welcome thing for Lucid. It’ll still be a Lucid, it’s not like anything else, but allowing us to broaden our swath a little bit.”
Before any of that, the company needs to get the Gravity out the door. Rawlinson said that the first Gravity buyers should receive their cars before the end of the year, with the company’s factory ramping up to full production speed through the beginning of 2025.
“The crash cars are being dispatched for crash validation. We built the cars for EPA range authentication,” he said. “This is on track.”

Lucid Motors CEO Peter Rawlinson demonstrating the Gravity SUV’s front trunk seating. | Image: Tim Stevens

Different brands do different things under the hoods of their EVs. Some fill that space with inverters and high-voltage cabling. Others carve out a cubby of extra storage, the frunk that many EV aficionados demand but few actually use.

With the Gravity SUV, Lucid is taking the frunk option a step further, creating a space that can be used as a seat. I confess, I thought it was a gimmick, but sitting in that frunk is surprisingly comfortable. It’s a bit cozy for two adults, as I found when Lucid CEO Peter Rawlinson joined me, but we fit just fine.

The Gravity is no longer a concept

Rawlinson was representing Lucid at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, where the Gravity was situated on the so-called “Concept Lawn,” just a few feet from the main event. That’s a bit of a misnomer, though, as the Gravity is no longer a concept. After years of anticipation, it’s finally becoming a reality.

“I had the honor, the privilege of driving the very first pre-production car off the production line in Casa Grande just a couple of weeks ago,” Rawlinson told me. That SUV, and others that follow, are going through verification now.

Image: Lucid
Lucid Gravity.

The electric Gravity SUV is the follow-up to the Air sedan, Lucid’s first (and so far, only) vehicle. Launched in 2021, the Air set a standard for range that has improved in the years since, now scoring 516 miles on a single charge in the $110,900 Grand Touring trim. Meanwhile, the $69,900 Air Pure has an efficiency rating of five miles per kWh and will get an estimated 420 miles of range from an 84kWh battery pack, making it one of the most efficient production EVs in the world.

With the Gravity launching into an increasingly skeptical market, Rawlinson sees this level of market-leading efficiency and continued performance as something of an antidote.

However, the market is carrying some extra turbulence thanks to the political posturing surrounding EVs. Rawlinson declined to weigh in on the political state of affairs. “I’m completely independent in terms of political viewpoint, really agnostic,” he said, before adding, “Unlike someone else, who’s clearly distracted with politics.”

Elon Musk jabs aside, Rawlinson said that reducing climate change is a strong motivator for his company and that any softness the EV market is experiencing now is short term.

“I’m completely independent in terms of political viewpoint, really agnostic.”

“I think we’re seeing a temporary blip. I think any talk of retrenchment into hybrids is a blind alley. I think hybrids offer the worst of all,” he said. Rawlinson also pointed at dealerships full of “underwhelming EVs,” a refrain echoed by the company’s senior vice president of design and brand, Derek Jenkins.

“A lot of EVs have been rushed to market with rather mediocre experiences, and I think that’s also affecting the overall perception of the category,” Jenkins said. “Long term, obviously, EV is the future. No question in my mind.”

But while the competition is getting stronger, on the premium EV side, the specter of excessive depreciation is slowing some buyers down. That the three-year-old Air still offers industry-leading range, Rawlinson says, will help Lucid’s cars buck that trend.

Still, the Air is a sedan in an SUV market, a problem the Gravity is designed to fix. Offering 440 miles of range and seating for seven (or eight, if you include the frunk seat) at a price somewhere under $80,000, the full-size SUV certainly offers compelling numbers. But Rawlinson’s primary targets are less about digits and more about performance.

“A lot of EVs have been rushed to market with rather mediocre experiences”

“The benchmark is Porsche Cayenne, Lamborghini Urus,” Rawlinson said. “It’s got more legroom than an Escalade. It’s got seven feet of flat loading area. So it’s got the practicality which is unprecedented here.”

The Air sedan also offers a combination of big speed and legroom, but it’s had some big problems, too. The sedan has seen 12 recalls and over 70 software updates since its release. Check owner groups and forums, and you’ll find endless complaints of glitches ranging from the mundane (touchscreens that won’t respond) to the more significant (doors that won’t unlock).

“There’s been a big learning curve with Air,” Jenkins said, lessons that will be applied to the Gravity, hopefully ensuring it comes out of the gate with a significant leg up over its predecessor.

There were lessons learned in manufacturing the Air, too. “We simplified even obvious things like… making closures and the openings of the vehicle easier to align and assemble,” he said.

This desire to simplify and streamline forced the Gravity design team to focus on design purity. “I’m proud of the Air interior, but I feel like here [with the Gravity] we managed to get even more minimalist and yet keep it warm and elegant, which is always my goal,” Jenkins said.

This desire to simplify and streamline forced the Gravity design team to focus on design purity

With the Gravity SUV, Rawlinson said he hopes to access a market six times bigger than the Air. Lucid says it’s on target to produce 9,000 of the sedans this year, having set new sales records in both Q1 and Q2. Still, deliveries are short of the company’s previous estimates of 10,000 per year.

Six times that from sales of the Gravity will substantially boost the company’s bottom line, but to go truly mainstream, Lucid will need to continue further down-market. There’s a plan for that, which Jenkins calls “the mid-size program.”

Lucid has a series of more affordable models in the works, with prices starting under $50,000 and planned availability in 2026. One is positioned squarely after the Tesla Model 3. Another predictably targets the world’s bestselling car, the Model Y, but Jenkins says there are more interesting things to come: “Then you’re going to see us move into a little bit more ruggedized category, which I think will be a welcome thing for Lucid. It’ll still be a Lucid, it’s not like anything else, but allowing us to broaden our swath a little bit.”

Before any of that, the company needs to get the Gravity out the door. Rawlinson said that the first Gravity buyers should receive their cars before the end of the year, with the company’s factory ramping up to full production speed through the beginning of 2025.

“The crash cars are being dispatched for crash validation. We built the cars for EPA range authentication,” he said. “This is on track.”

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