How Big Tech is helping transform cars into smartphones
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[January 09, 2020] By
Jane Lanhee Lee and Stephen Nellis
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Technology companies
transformed smartphones and televisions into continuous fountains of
revenue. Now, big tech wants to work with automakers to do the same
thing for your car.
With the widespread rollout of autonomous vehicles still years away, the
two industries have converged on the idea of cars providing services and
features delivered "over the air" - that is, over the same wireless data
networks used by smart phones.
Those services - streaming video, vehicle performance upgrades,
dashboard commerce - could answer a pressing need for automakers. They
need to learn how to milk their hardware for revenue long after vehicles
roll off dealers' lots. Tech companies see cars and the time people
spend in them as a new frontier for growth.
Both auto and tech companies used the big CES technology show here this
week to showcase their determination to make the vision of vehicles as
connected revenue machines a reality. Cloud computing giants Amazon.com
Inc <AMZN.O> and Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O> were in the forefront, chasing
the opportunity to manage torrents of data flowing to and from connected
vehicles.
“It’s absolutely huge,” General Motors Co <GM.N> President Mark Reuss
said in December of the opportunities to generate revenue after a
vehicle is sold by providing streamed services and over-the-air upgrades
facilitated by GM's new high-capacity onboard electrical system.
The pivot comes at a time when global automakers are looking for fresh
revenue sources as sales slow and as rising costs to comply with tougher
emissions standards threaten profit margins. Shares of legacy automakers
such as Ford Motor Co <F.N> and GM badly lagged broader market indexes
in 2019. The contrast is Tesla Inc <TSLA.O>, whose market cap on
Wednesday for the first time exceeded Ford and GM's combined market
values.
Tesla pioneered the model for charging for over-the-air upgrades, now
asking customers to pay $6,000 to turn on the full self-driving option.
Other automakers are eager to try their hand at turning cars into
upgradeable, revenue-generating gadgets.
Chinese carmaker Byton's new M-Byte sedan features a 48-inch screen as a
dashboard, as well as a steering-wheel display and a digital tablet for
passengers. When parked, the car can be an office, enabling video
conference calls, or a roadside cinema.
BMW <BMWG.DE> showed at its CES display a concept of its future interior
with reclining lounge chairs and a windshield with augmented reality
built in to annotate the road ahead. BMW executive Klaus Froehlich told
Reuters the automaker is seeking approval from the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration to get U.S. approval for the seats, but
could not say when they would appear in production.
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An interior view of the Byton M-Byte all-electric SUV,
expected to enter mass production this year, is shown at a
news conference during the 2020 CES in Las Vegas, Nevada,
U.S. January 5, 2020. REUTERS/Steve Marcus/File Photo
Tech companies and suppliers want to accelerate the transformation of vehicles
into subscription bundle-ready machines by helping automakers sort out the
tangle of computer chips that make most current vehicles difficult or impossible
to upgrade over the air.
The current crazy quilt of vehicle processors “is not cost effective, and it's
hard to get (vehicles) developed and launched so that everything works all the
time,” said Glen De Vos, chief technology officer of auto supplier Aptiv Plc <APTV.N>.
Aptiv's solution: A new Smart Vehicle Architecture that consolidates most
computerized functions.
Harman, a unit of Samsung Electronics Co Ltd <005930.KS>, is also pushing a
similar digital platform to control the flow of data in and out of the car. A
centralized system, said Chief Executive Dinesh Paliwal, would help protect the
car against hackers, who would have only one way in rather than dozens.
Harman, which supplies some of the technology that automakers including Tesla
use to deliver the over-the-air upgrades, plans to sell its new vehicle
computing brain with cybersecurity features built in - but some car buyers will
have to pay to turn it on.
Qualcomm Inc <QCOM.O>, which already provides the cellular modem chips that
allow vehicles to connect to the internet, introduced a more comprehensive
computing system that can manage in-vehicle entertainment and help the car drive
itself. One element is a much easier way for automakers and their partners to
deliver feature upgrades, such as unlocking a better sound system already built
into the car.
NXP Semiconductors <NXPI.O> is working on a chip that would serve as a gateway
between the car and the cloud, to help automakers cope with the massive amounts
of data that sensors and digital cockpits will create.
That data has to be stored and managed, and that's where cloud computing
providers such as Amazon Web Services come in. AWS announced at CES a
partnership with BlackBerry to develop a new software platform for connected
vehicles.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis and Jane Lanhee Lee in Las Vegas. Writing by
Stephen Nellis; Additional reporting by Joe White and Paul Lienert in Detroit;
Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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