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Internet-connected cars their functionality and safety challenges

Internet-connected cars are poised to flood the market in the near future. Pete Goldin considers the functionality they offer, the technology they use and the challenge they represent in terms of driver safety. Many vehicles on the road today offer some sort of inter­net connectivity and experts agree that this capability will become a competi­tive differentiator in the automotive industry in the next few years. The era of the digital vehicle, it seems, has started. “We clearly see that cars in the near f
February 27, 2013 Read time: 7 mins
Ford strategy
Ford strategy is to leverage existing devices and network subscriptions, rather than embed internet connectivity in the car

Internet-connected cars are poised to flood the market in the near future. Pete Goldin considers the functionality they offer, the technology they use and the challenge they represent in terms of driver safety.

Many vehicles on the road today offer some sort of inter­net connectivity and experts agree that this capability will become a competi­tive differentiator in the automotive industry in the next few years. The era of the digital vehicle, it seems, has started.

“We clearly see that cars in the near future will integrate the same level of digital services that consumers today are used to having in their homes or at work,” says Lex Kerssemakers, senior vice president, prod­uct strategy and vehicle line management at 7192 Volvo Cars.

In 5650 Ericsson’s recent report, More Than 50 Billion Connected Devices, the company predicts there will be 50bn connected de­vices by 2020, including 1.5bn vehicles around the world.

2177 Gartner made a prediction a couple of years ago, which still holds true: by 2016, the majority of consumers in mature automo­tive markets like the US will have access to web-based content in the vehicle as a key buying criteria,” concurs Thilo Koslowski, vice president practice leader, automotive, vehicle ICT and mobility at Gartner.

You might think internet connectivity just means web surfing while in the car, with something that looks similar to a PC or laptop embedded in the dashboard. The reality is that there are a vari­ety of uses, however, and most current internet applications in vehicles do not involve the impractical practice of the driver browsing the web.

True connectivity

“True connectivity means so much more than creating the latest in­teractive dashboard feature: it’s about placing the consumer – not the car – at the centre of the digital equation,” says Joel Kremke, senior vice president of cloud provider 7193 Covisint.

There are many uses for internet connectivity in vehicles, but the most popular is providing the driver with content. Koslowski points out that content must be targeted to the driver’s needs, however, rather than simply opening up access to anything that can be found on the internet via a PC or smartphone.

493 Apple always points out how many apps they have, but that doesn’t make any sense in the vehicle,” Koslowski explains. “The driver still has to operate the car. So the question in the automobile should be: should there NOT be an app for that?

“The automotive industry does not understand this yet,” he con­tinues. “There are still quite a number of companies out there trying to introduce one app after another, instead of really thinking about what matters to people when they are operating a vehicle. If you try to replicate a PC on wheels, that is when you lose consumers, because the car is not the ideal platform for that.”

Ultimately, the internet will have to accomplish two main goals, says Koslowski – enhance the driving experience and enhance the automobile ownership experience.

From the perspective of the driving experience, traveller infor­mation such as navigation, weather, traffic, gas prices and parking information make practical sense. Infotainment, such as news, sports scores and streaming music, and messaging such as email, 2171 Twitter and 2170 Facebook are all important content that can be targeted to en­hance the driving experience as well.

An example is the new Sensus Connected Touch system, a connectivity solution that will be available in Volvo cars from May.

Current functionality includes streaming music via Spotify and Deezer; web radio with TuneIn and Orange Live Radio; Connected Navigation with traffic information; 1691 Google map and search; tourist information; and free parking search.

On the other hand, the ownership experience involves the ve­hicle communicating information, such as repair or maintenance needs, to the driver.
“A good example would be my vehicle Tweeting me when it needs an oil change. That requires the vehicle to be connected to my social ecosystem,” says Dave Miller, chief security officer at Covisint.

Using Volvo as an example again, the Volvo On Call system of­fers smartphone apps for iOS, Android and Windows phones. Cus­tomers can use these apps to check car status, petrol level, average fuel consumption, mileage, warning messages, alarm and door lock status, and location of the car shown on a Google map.

Connection choices

There are two basic ways a car can get connected. One way is via embedded technology, similar to a mobile device, that connects directly to the internet. “Think of the vehicle as basically another device in a user’s life – basically a cell phone that goes really fast and has an engine,” says Miller. “Vehicles are moving towards being movable endpoints,” he continues. “They can have their own TCP/ IP address. They can be directly addressed.”

Premium automotive brands such as 1731 BMW and 2125 Audi are cur­rently offering embedded systems for connectivity and it may become standard for auto OEMs to include internet connectivity technology from the assembly line.

The smartphone is the second option for vehicle connectivity. Vehicles can be tethered directly to the smartphone via USB, or simply use the smartphone as a wireless hotspot.

7194 Juniper Research believes the balance is shifting from embedded systems towards smartphone-enabled services. It forecasts that 92m vehicles will feature technology to integrate the smartphone into the head unit by 2016.

“For smartphone apps, we have a feature called AppLink which allows drivers to interface and control apps through our SYNC voice recognition system,” says Alan Hall, communications man­ager, technology, research and innovation at 278 Ford. “Working with app partners, we’ve enabled over 60 apps to be compatible with AppLink, allowing drivers to use simple voice commands to control the apps on their smartphone but playing content – music, podcasts, navigation – through the car’s audio system.

“Using a built-in Wi-Fi chip, a customer can bring in a 3G/4G connection by plugging in a USB modem or by Bluetooth-tethering with a smartphone, and create a Wi-Fi hotspot inside the car,” adds Hall. “Passengers can then connect multiple devices and use them during a trip.

“We do not offer an embedded cellular connection like some of our competitors, because our strategy is to leverage existing devices and network subscriptions that you already own and pay for,” he says.

“The carriers play a very big role here,” notes Koslowski. “Some of these carriers are quite interested in being more than just the ‘pipe’, and also provide application services and intelligence. The manufacturers will have to figure out how to be more involved as

“The driver still has to operate the car. So the question in the automobile should be: should there NOT be an app for that?”
well, and do certain things in-house. This is currently the state of the industry, where the mindset is trying to figure out who does what, who provides what aspect of the connected vehicle ecosystem.”

Interface challenge

One of the most important aspects of vehicle internet connectivity is the interface, of course.

“A lot of these in-vehicle connectivity systems today are not all that great from the user experience point of view,” Koslowski admits. “Most consumers would agree that using a smartphone while driving is not a great user experience either. So I think the consumers are ready to see something new.

“The opportunity lies for the automotive industry – with regard to the process of consuming and requesting information in the vehicle – to really shine here and do something innovative that would go beyond what the smartphone does. The human machine interface (HMI) is where the industry needs to do a better job.”

Today, auto manufacturers offer touch screens or pads, rotary control knobs, and voice activated controls. Koslowski hopes au­tomakers will go way beyond these, exploring areas as futuristic as gesture recognition and mood detection. Another important inter­face issue, of course, is that of possible driver distraction.

“I have a strong concern about internet use while driving,” John Maddox, director of collaborative strategies for UMTRI/TTI, agrees. “Internet browsing is a very visually intensive task. I just do not see how that is compatible with the task of driving.”
“I actually see driver distraction as a motivation, not a threat,” Koslowski counters, “because it really emphasises how the automo­tive industry needs to innovate in this area.”

Koslowski also points out that the interface is where vehicle manufacturers will really be able to differentiate themselves.

“You will not necessarily be able to differentiate on the content side,” he explains. “The remaining opportunity is how we are able to consume, create and share this content. That is where I think the thrust in the organisation can come from, finding a way to differenti­ate and ultimately charge for it.

“This is a great revenue opportunity for the automotive industry,” he concludes. “I think the industry has yet to truly embrace this idea and not just copy what people do when they take their phones into the car.”

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