Audi has Business Insider's 2016 Infotainment System of the Year

BI Infotainment of the Year 4x3
BI Infotainment of the Year 4x3

(Audi has the winner!Skye Gould/BI Graphics)

The Business Insider Transportation team just announced our 2016 Car of the Year, the Acura NSX. We also named five runners-for our third-annual edition of the award.

This year, we've added two new trophies: Audio System of the Year, won by Bowers & Wilkins; and Infotainment System of the Year.

For 2016, our Infotainment System of the Year goes to Audi.

The finalist were:

  • Audi MMI/Virtual Cockpit

  • BMW iDrive

  • Ford SYNC 3/SYNC and MyFord Touch

  • General Motors MyLink/IntelliLink/Cue plus OnStar

  • Tesla Touchscreen

As connectivity, apps, smartphone integration (for voice calls and texting, as well as email), GPS navigation, and autonomous-driving features become more important features of the auto experience, we feel that it's essential to provide our take on the carmakers that are doing the best job of pulling together all these elements — don't forget to throw in Apple CarPlay and Android Auto — under the general rubric of "infotainment."

A great infotainment system makes car ownership a pleasure. A poor system makes it a chore. Consumers are far more demanding these days than they were just five years ago. And they're going to get more demanding, as 24/7 connectedness continues to define their lives.

Safety first

Of course, not all trends are good ones: Consumer Reports has noted frequent owner complaints about balky infotainment systems; and the issue of distracted driving is of paramount importance.

We consider a great infotainment system to be one that performs all its functions relatively seamlessly and with as much of an intuitive interface as possible. At this juncture, voice-recognition technologies are still at an early stage, but we certainly appreciate when a manufacturer's setup works as advertised and isn't clunkier than the more dangerous manual-entry-of-info modes.

An impressive infotainment system isn't always like what you might get with a smartphone or a tablet. If it were, Tesla's massive Touchscreen would have been a winner this year, as nearly all vehicle and infotainment features are controlled through it.

Reliability, ease-of-use, precision (especially when it comes to navigation) and the ability of a system to be operated while driving without endangering anyone were key criteria for our choice — which involved debate and discussion all year long among Senior Correspondent Matt DeBord, Transportation Reporters Ben Zhang and Danielle Muoio, and Senior Transportation Editor Cadie Thompson (Evening News Editor and West Coast car buff Bryan Logan also kicked in his thoughts).