Reduced driver involvement. It's been going on since day 1. Granted, some improvements (like not having to leave your car to start it) are definite improvements, but others are not (cruise control, self-parking), and others are endlessly debateable (power steering, ABS).
The whole thing's going to bell-curve on us: better & better followed by worse & worse. Not sure where the peak is, but I think we're near it. The less people are involved in what's going on behind the wheel, the less they feel they need to pay attention. End result? No on-road improvement.
Headlights that go further and further into the car:
I think that's due to increased pedestrian safety regulations, requiring more "soft" material between the point of impact and the "hard" engine. To combat this increasingly gallic nose, the headlights are stretched around the corners to make it seem as if they start further back on the car, thus (not really) reducing the look of a overlong front end.
This, of course, is not the correct solution to proper pedestrian safety. Since we can't prevent idiots from crossing the road at random (which
is the correct solution), the proper compromise is different materials of the vehicles face and relocation of the hard points (engine, strut towers, etc.). Of course, that requires much more time & money than just stretching the nose out. Until someone actually engineers this properly, we'll have some nosey cars for the next few years.