Archive Pages Design$type=blogging

Nokia has a bigger connected gadget in the car

Rumors of a Nokia tablet has got the tech world buzzing, but Nokia’s plans to expand beyond the handset are much more amb...



Rumors of a Nokia tablet has got the tech world buzzing, but Nokia’s plans to expand beyond the handset are much more ambitious than producing a mere slate. Nokia EVP of Location and Commerce Michael Halbherr told GigaOM that the Finnish handset maker is eyeballing the car as the next repository of its technology and applications and has plans to launch some form of connected car platform in the future.

Of course, Nokia is already a significant player in the automotive market. The company supplies maps for navigation systems through its Navteq group, which along with the rest of Nokia’s location services was recently renamed Here, the massive Nokia division Halbherr now heads up.
Nokia plans to use that deep-seeded mapping relationship with automakers as springboard into more sophisticated connected car and infotainment services, Halbherr said.
“Historically we’ve supplied content to the automotive industry – first maps and now traffic,” Halbherr said in a recent interview at Here’s Chicago HQ. “As more cars get connected we have the opportunity to move up the stack from a content player to a platform player to a services player.”
What kind of connected car services is Nokia planning beyond mapping? Halbherr wouldn’t talk specifics, saying the company would reveal more of its strategy soon. But he did say that Nokia is thinking far beyond the dashboard with plans to broach autonomous — or driverless — vehicle technologies and explore ways of integrating the car into larger transportation and “smart city” networks. This melding of the private vehicle into the public network is a topic Halbherr plans to discuss in detail at GigaOM’s Mobilize conference in October.
Halbherr said Nokia envisions cars that can not only direct you or drive you to your destination by the fastest possible route, but also cars that can send you on routes that minimize carbon emissions, that coordinate with the congestion and traffic management systems being developed in large cities and even work in tandem with public transit to more efficiently move people across a densely packed urban landscape. Halbherr said future connected cars can not only tell you the most optimal time to drive, they could also help you avoid driving altogether.

Connected car or connected cartography?

In our conversation, Halbherr consistently returned to the lowly map. The map may be Nokia’s automotive “in” and the primary ingredient in navigation systems, but Halbherr said it could be so much more.

Nokia’s North American traffic tracking center in Chicago

“What is a map?” Halbherr asked. “Historically it’s a visual representation of reality, but we are building more than a map. We’re building a one-to-one representation – it’s about a digital recreation of reality.”
Halbherr argues that all of the connected car’s most promising applications lean heavily on location. The map provides a context against which a car can compare real-time sensor information and data from other networked vehicles to navigate the streets.

A car won’t just use a map to know its own location, but the location of the objects around it. Nokia is already overlaying that map with virtual information, which can not only be accessed by apps but can projected into the field of vision through augmented reality technologies like Nokia’s City Lens. In short, maps are going to make the connected car go, and there are few companies that can deliver the map that Nokia can, Halbherr
The unnamed company at the top of that list is, of course, Google. Last decade, Navteq and its Dutch competitor Tele Atlas (later acquired by TomTom) ruled the street mapping world, but Google has since established itself as the king of the interactive street map. Not only has it built what many would argue is the world’s most sophisticated navigation and location-based services operation with Google Maps and Streetview, but it is willing to acquire companies like crowdsourced traffic startup Waze that innovate in the space (though the Waze deal may be hitting some bumps with European regulators).
Still, Nokia has an enormous mapping operation. According to Halbherr it makes 2.7 million individual changes to its global maps everyday. It has created Nokia Here mapping and Drive turn-by-turn navigation apps, now standard on Windows phones and available on iOS and Android. It has traffic operations centers in North America and Europe that use roadside sensors, crowdsourced data from Here apps and even live traffic camera feeds to provide real-time congestion data to navigation companies and automakers all over the world.

Will the automakers buy into the Nokia car?

While maps are critical, there is a lot more that goes into a connected car. Nokia has years of experience integrating hardware, software and services – though Google recently gained similar expertise when it bought Motorola. Nokia also already comes with an OS known to the automakers, thanks to its tight-knit relationship with Microsoft.
Many automakers, including Ford already use embedded versions of the Windows OS to run their infotainment systems. Nokia can build on a platform they’re already comfortable with.

But the biggest factor in Nokia’s favor may be the fact it’s simply not Google, Apple or any other Silicon Valley interloper intruding on the automakers’ turf. Though some carmakers like Audi have already gotten in bed with Google Maps, and several more have signed on to work with Apple’s Siri Eyes Free voice interface, there’s a danger that by working with them carmakers will lose control of the connected car.
Google’s services are essentially free to consumers – it makes its money through advertising. Apple is trying to trying to substitute Siri for the dashboard interface, and the company that controls the user interface controls what apps and services the driver accesses. The auto industry has traditionally maintained a tight hold on what services make it into the car. It’s accustomed to charging drivers for services they could get free on a PC or smart phone and controlling what apps drivers can use. Carmakers don’t want their cars to be dumb vessels for some other company’s apps.
The automakers are a conservative bunch, but I believe they realize they have to become more open. They just don’t want to change as quickly as a company like Google wants. With Nokia, automakers have a comfortable relationship: Nokia sells them maps, and they in turn sell those maps to the driving public. If it can expand that model to other aspects of the connected car, then Nokia might be the exact partner the automakers are looking for.

Courtesy: Gigaom
Name

“Green Weenie” Electric Locomotive 089 brand-new LED street lights 141 15 1700 2014 Chevy Spark EV Test Drive 3-Wheeler 3D 3D mapping 42 Folding Bikes 6TB 800HP 83 Mph On Bike 9 90-Second Battery Swap AC addicts Air Algae Amazing Amsterdam Andriod Android Wear Anti-virus app Apple Apple 24-inch touchscreen TV for your kitchen Apple OS X Apple Watch apps Arcade Architects Artificial intelligence Artificial-Intelligence Asia Asus' Bamboo Series Of Laptops auto Available avoidance Baby Bahamas Bahrain World Trade Center Balls Battery Begum Belgian Believe Berlin Best best pocket-sized smart phones bike Bike Ayaskan Biofuel Block BMW C Evolution Electric Scooter BMW EV Driving BMW EV Revolution BMW X5 Boat Boiling Bosch Boss bug Bugs Build Solar Air Heater Bulb Buran car CarCharging Cardboard Cars champion Championship charge Charging Chevy Chevy Spark Chevy Spark EV China city Clean Bus collision Competition computer Conditioner Confirmed connect Conserve Control Control Center Create Customization Customize CyberPowerPC Data Center Delivery design Device Devices Dice House Dirty Dislike Disney Doctor is going DIGITAL dollar Dongtan Eco-City Dota2 Double-Decker driving Drone Drought dust E-Ink e-NV200 e-NV200 from Nissan e-Van Eastcheap EcoTech International Group Eddie Cannon edrive Electric Electric 3-Wheeler Toyota iRoad Electric Bus Electric car electric car from Nissan Electric Cars Electric Cars In Bahamas electric mini car Electric Vehicle electromagnetic field electronic medical record Electronics Elegant EMR EN-V 2.0 Energy Energy-Saving engine estate eStation C510 Printer EV EV Charging Evatran evolution Executive Expand explain Facebook Famous Solar Airplane Fastest Features Ferry Fiat 500e first flying Footsteps Frankfurt 2013 furniture Furry Future Future Wonders G12 gadgets Galaxy Note 3′s screen won’t kill its battery game games gaming PC Gas Gear Google Graphene gravel Green green buildings Green Tech Products Green Technology Greyp Grid Hackers headset health Heat Cameras Home HomeKit Honeywell horsepower How Hp HTC hybrid Hyundai Hyundai Hybrid Planned For Next Year ideas Insider Intelligent Power Software Suite Internet Internet Explorer IOS 7 features iPhone iTunes Radio Jaguar Japan journey July July 29 keyboard keys Kindle Cover Koenigsegg Land Land Securities and Canary Wharf lanes Largest Laser Measures late launch Leave LED Streetlight LEGO Car Level Life Light Lighthouse skyscraper Lilypad Project logo London Los Angeles lose Lotus C-01 Motorcycle Low-Tech Ways luxury Mac Machine MagLev Wind Turbine Mail Makeover Makes Making Manager Market Melbourne menu Mercedes Metropolitan Microsoft Microsoft Edge Microsoft to buy Nokia million millionaire Mirror Missing mobile Mobility Modular Monaco monitoring device monstrous Most Efficient Retail EV In US MW Nano Vent-Skin NASA need Network New New Life Nissan Nissan Nismo smartwatch Nokia car Nokia EVP Nokia’s devices division Nokia’s traffic tracking center Nottinghamshire Nujira envelope tracking occupancy sensors Offer OnHub Opteron Server Chips Original Pakistan Pakistani Park Part PC Pilot plant plastic sheet Plastic-Free Play Back Playmation Plug Plugless EV Charging Pompom Pool Portable Electric Space Heaters pot potholes Power Powered Preview printed Printing Program Project Morpheus Project Tango Proposed Prototype Pumps Purchase Racing Re Style barber Ready real-time Reality Recycling Reflection Remain Research reserve Rimac Road Ready RoboCup Rotating Tower router Rover Safe Samsung sand saucer Seattle Self-Driving Shade Shai Agassi Shake short Show Shuttle Siemens single-charge driving range skyscraper Smart smart glass Smart Window smarter Smartphone smartwatch Snake Snake Rewind Soccer social Soda Cans solana Solar Solar Impulse Solar Leaves Solar Speakers Solar Spray solar tower Solutions Sony Soviet space spaces spot SSD Start Stella Stephen Elop Steve Ballmer Steve Ballmer email to Microsoft employees Storage Store Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Sumail Hassan supercar Supplied Surface Book Surface Pro 4 Swimming System tablet Tado Taipei Financial Center Corp (TFC) Taiwan’s Taipei 101 become the world’s tallest GREEN building tallest Team Technology telescope Tell Temperature sensors Tesla test text The Apple Watch The Chicago Spire The Midual Type 1 Prototype The Quantance ET chip The Steven Leach Group thermal energy Thing ThinkStations threat to the auto industry ticket Tohoku Top Toshiba Touch Toyota Toyota iRoad Toyota Yaris Hybrid-R Toys Traffic.Noise.Reduce.Life.Risk.Stroke train Tram Transbay Transit Center Transformable Transformed Trinity U.S UK Unveil Up upgrading Urban Urban skyscraper farms VAIO SA Laptop Valve Vive Vehicles VeloX3 Video Videos Viet Cafe Virtual virtual reality Walkie Talkie building is melting BICYCLES walking wallpaper that listens and measures Washington’s Wind Farms waste energy plant watch water Water-Powered Alarm Clock win window 98 Windows Windows 10 wireless wooden Work World World’s Largest Solar Thermal Plant Wunderlist Year You Yvonne Chan
false
ltr
item
Green-Teck: Nokia has a bigger connected gadget in the car
Nokia has a bigger connected gadget in the car
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxfMzHZPC7b0BXTKLdPKPmwWBHskHPn_Q1mxW2w7-K7nfScugoLYpi_xuehIHJH6v55OnZ97ht5Yg1AyoqmgBeosB-Gf4Mi0kUMN_bcbQGi1zMCAQr2YLPLY621N7MOEnkncB_yjUeU8gQ/s640/nokia_tour_hybrid_car-640x480.jpg
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxfMzHZPC7b0BXTKLdPKPmwWBHskHPn_Q1mxW2w7-K7nfScugoLYpi_xuehIHJH6v55OnZ97ht5Yg1AyoqmgBeosB-Gf4Mi0kUMN_bcbQGi1zMCAQr2YLPLY621N7MOEnkncB_yjUeU8gQ/s72-c/nokia_tour_hybrid_car-640x480.jpg
Green-Teck
https://green-teck.blogspot.com/2013/08/nokia-has-bigger-connected-gadget-in-car.html
https://green-teck.blogspot.com/
https://green-teck.blogspot.com/
https://green-teck.blogspot.com/2013/08/nokia-has-bigger-connected-gadget-in-car.html
true
4903610028766523855
UTF-8
Not found any posts VIEW ALL Readmore Reply Cancel reply Delete By Home PAGES POSTS View All RECOMMENDED FOR YOU LABEL ARCHIVE SEARCH Not found any post match with your request Back Home Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat January February March April May June July August September October November December Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec just now 1 minute ago $$1$$ minutes ago 1 hour ago $$1$$ hours ago Yesterday $$1$$ days ago $$1$$ weeks ago more than 5 weeks ago