Nokia Releases Spec for Syncing Smartphones with Car Systems
Nokia and the Consumer Electronics for Automotive working group, made up of
Audi, BMW, Daimler, Porsche and Volkswagen, released the Terminal Mode
specification May 19. The companies proposed that the technology be used as the
industry standard for integrating mobile applications inside a vehicle.
"The average person spends between 1 and 2 hours per day in their car,"
Nokia said in a March 4 statement introducing Terminal Mode. "Given that
their smartphone not only holds their favorite music but now, if it is a Nokia
smartphone, comes with free worldwide navigation services (Ovi Maps), the next
logical step is to provide an easy way to connect their smartphone to their
car. This way services and content from the mobile can be fully integrated with
the in-car speakers, displays and control systems."
A consumer, for example, would be able to access all the music and applications
in a handset through the vehicle's "infotainment" and audio systems.
The connection, Nokia added, should be two-way, enabling the driver to use a
smartphone to access performance information about the vehicle.
Nokia and CE4A emphasized that the Terminal Mode specification is open to all
automotive and mobile device manufacturers. Timo Ali-Vehmas, Nokia's head of
compatibility and industry collaboration, said the specification showed Nokia's
commitment to creating partnerships in the car industry and with other
manufacturers.
"Nokia is an active member of many open standardization initiatives and
forums globally, and is keen to enable open collaboration and broader use of
innovation for the faster adoption of new services and products for the benefit
of consumers," Ali-Vehmas said in a release.
Nokia is hardly alone in seeing the mobile potential in the automotive
industry. BlackBerry maker Research In Motion on April 9 announced that it had
agreed to buy
Harman International's QNX, an in-vehicle infotainment and telematics
system.
And Samsung announced May 12, alongside Sprint and Citrix Systems, that Samsung's
Android-running Moment smartphone was Cixtrix Ready-certified. The Citrix
Ready program identifies third-party solutions that can be paired with the
virtual desktop capabilities in a Citrix Receiver, which extends
virtualization, networking and cloud computing solutions to mobile platforms.
Ford's Ford Work Solution program, which is deployed in many of its pickup
trucks and vans, is among the mobile environments under consideration for a
Citrix Receiver. In a deployed solution, a driver could access business tools
from a smartphone, using the tools on the dashboard.
"By combining the strengths of Sprint and Samsung with Citrix, businesses
can gain the ability to utilize mobile computing not only from a handheld
device or PC/laptop/netbook perspective, but to extend the capability to the
true road warrior environment," the companies said in a statement.
Nokia's Terminal Mode was developed in cooperation with its Research
Center in Palo
Alto, Calif., and CE4A. The
specification is now available as a free download.
