In the automotive industry, few technologies have spent longer in the “promising but peripheral” category than the head-up display. Yet as vehicles become increasingly software-defined - and as the cockpit itself evolves from a mechanical interface into a digital environment - the humble windshield is beginning to look less like passive glass and more like prime visual real estate.
That is the backdrop to this latest episode of Supplier Soundbytes from S&P Global Mobility, featuring Andy Travers, chief executive of Ceres Holographics. The company’s proposition is deceptively simple: rather than bolting ever more screens into the dashboard, embed holographic optical films directly into the windshield itself, turning the glass into part of the display architecture.
The implications, however, are rather larger than another iteration of the conventional head-up display. Travers argues that legacy HUD systems have reached something close to their functional ceiling, constrained as much by limited user experience as by hardware. The next phase, he suggests, will depend less on projecting more information and more on deciding which information matters — and when.
The conversation ranges from the misuse of the term “holographic” to the practical realities of integrating optical films into automotive glass supply chains. But beneath the technical detail sits a broader strategic question for carmakers: if the windshield becomes a dynamic digital surface, who controls the value - the optics specialists enabling the display, or the software platforms determining the experience?
For OEMs, the message is clear. The technology may now be ready. The industry’s imagination, perhaps, is still catching up.

Andy Travers
[Source: Ceres Holographics]
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