Toyota uses open-source
software in new approach to in-car tech
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[May 31, 2017]
By Naomi Tajitsu
TOKYO
(Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp on Wednesday said the infotainment system
of its revamped Camry sedan to be sold in the United States will run on
a Linux-based, open-source technology platform as it tries to keep up
with tech firms in developing software for cars.
With the Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) system in a mainstay model, Toyota
aims to have the flexibility to customise its software, while it would
also keep user data that could otherwise be captured by CarPlay from
Apple Inc or Android Auto from Alphabet Inc's Google - applications
which enable users to access smartphone data through vehicle
infotainment systems.
Toyota is among 10 global automakers working with suppliers and
technology companies to jointly build AGL, a basic, open-source platform
for vehicle applications which automakers can customise, eliminating the
need to code systems from the ground up for each vehicle model.
Developing the platform in collaboration with Mazda Motor Corp, Suzuki
Motor Corp, Daimler AG and others will reduce development time and
costs, Toyota said, and create an industry standard platform to operate
in-vehicle features including music and navigation applications.
The platform can also be used to support future advanced technologies,
including self-driving functions and connected car services.
"It's very necessary to reduce the overhead of duplication work among
our suppliers so they can spend more time to create new things rather
than maintaining fragmentary codes," said Kenichi Murata, group manager
of Connected Strategy and Planning at Toyota.
Cars typically require over 100 million lines of computer code as
automakers pack as much technology as possible to attract buyers.
So much so that coding has become an increasingly cumbersome part of
vehicle development, which takes years, compared with the mere months it
takes for tech firms to develop apps.
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Akio Toyoda, president of Toyota Motor Corporation, introduces the
2018 Camry XSE (L) and the 2018 Camry XLE during the North American
International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., January 9, 2017.
REUTERS/Mark Blinch/File Photo
In
addition, the process requires constant updating to keep up with technology
developments and which results in disparate interfaces between automaker's
products.
The
latest Camry sedan to be launched in coming months will use AGL to operate its
suite of in-vehicle apps, and the Japanese automaker said it planned to expand
the platform to other Toyota and Lexus vehicles in North America and elsewhere.
Roughly 70 percent of the operating platform for the latest system consists of
largely generic coding, while the remaining 30 percent was customized for the
Camry, Murata said.
At the moment, automakers make vehicles compatible with CarPlay and Android
Auto. While this enables users to connect smartphones to cars, Dan Cauchy,
general manager of automotive at the Linux Foundation, said it makes it
difficult for automakers to have control over customizing their platforms.
"It comes down to an automaker wanting to customise their operating platform to
their liking and not having a third party dictating what the applications are
going to be for the vehicle," he said.
"A lot of automakers want that control."
(Reporting by Naomi Tajitsu; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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