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FUTURE OF THE CAR 2026: ARCHITECTING TRUSTED MOBILITY IN THE SDV ERA

June 02, 2026

The automotive industry is navigating one of its most consequential transformations. The shift toward software-defined vehicles is not simply a product update; it is a fundamental rethinking of how vehicles are architected, validated, and experienced.

Yet complexity, integration risk, and the pressure to anticipate future customer needs are exposing the limits of legacy approaches.

In this four-part video series, ADI’s Yasmine King examines what it takes to build vehicles that can truly evolve, from foundational architecture and real-time observability to system-level interoperability and the leadership mindset required to move with speed and confidence.

Featured Participants:

  • Yasmine King, Corporate Vice President, Head of Automotive, Analog Devices, Inc.
  • Moderator: Imogen Bhogal, Chief Content Officer, The Fully Charged Show and The Everything Electric Show.

Featured Video Segments:

Software-Defined Vehicles Start with Architecture, Not Software


Software-defined vehicles demand more than added software. True transformation starts with architecture built to evolve, with intelligence and observability designed throughout. Battery management shows what becomes possible when deeper system insight supports safety, performance, and faster validation.

Why Adaptability Is the Real Test of the Software-Defined Vehicle


Predicting what customers will want in two or five years is not realistic. The answer is architecture built for flexibility from the start, where real-time diagnostics and genuine confidence in system impact make software updates truly meaningful.

Solving the Integration Challenge in Software-Defined Vehicles


The hardest challenges in vehicle architecture often emerge between domains, not within them. True evolution depends on decoupling hardware and software, optimizing at the system level, and enabling interoperability inside and beyond the vehicle.

How OEMs Can Differentiate in a Software-Defined World


Customer experience is becoming a defining competitive edge, but it still depends on trusted foundational hardware. OEMs that will lead will combine the courage to challenge legacy structures with the discipline to build in intentional architecture, visibility, and diagnostics from day one.

Video clips provided by FT Live from the 2026 Future of the Car Summit. Used with permission. Rights remain with FT Live.