Having operated and maintained cars from the 60- 70's and operate the newer ones today, I'd have to say I do not miss the maintenance required to keep the points ignition alive. The only thing that has changed in auto piston engine operation between the 60's and now is the absence of TEL, fuel injection, and electronic ignition. Prior to the advent of the newer engine management systems, they were junk at 100,000 miles. Now they'll easily go 300,000 or better.
As pilots, why wouldn't we want that kind of extended operation capability, reliability, AND better performance and economy, as well as eliminating some pilot workload?
GM came out with HEI ignition in 1974. It had an electronic module inside it that replaced the points and all the old timers told me to keep a spare handy because it would leave you stranded. I did keep a spare handy but in 25 years of operating those ignition systems on the vehicles I owned I never used it. When I replaced the last HEI equipped vehicle I threw that spare module away. On the distributorless ignitions I've operated in the last 20 years (no I'm not that old, there is some overlap in there), I've had spark plugs last well beyond the manufacturer TBR of 100,000 miles (175,000 miles on one of them).
I don't have a product to sell in this issue; I only have the experience and the observation of what modern engine management systems are capable of doing as a benefit to the aviation world. What I don't understand is pilots are resistant to accepting these benefits as they are "happy" with the status quo. That same dynamic existed among the early mechanics as auto technology was evolving. I'm old enough to see the pattern now.
Mags and carbs and TEL work if you like working on it all the time. For me, I'm glad those days are gone in the automotive world and would like to see the benefits brought into aviation.