Telematics and GPS go in the right direction
Navigation assistance gets more user-friendly with help of technology
INTERACTIVE |
10 odd-looking foreign cars From the Fiat 500 to the Tata Nano — these foreign cars leave us speechless. |
Latest interest rates |
See today's average mortgage rates across the country.
See today's average home equity rates across the country.
See today's savings rates across the country.
See today's average auto rates across the country.
|
|
In this scenario, the driver need only press a button to request assistance locating the nearest tire shop that is still open. An operator finds the shops by matching local data with the car’s GPS location. With a candidate tire shop conferenced on the line by the operator, the driver provides the tire size and the shop confirms they have it in stock and ready to be installed.
But the driver doesn’t know where the shop is located. Before the tire shop employee can attempt to give directions, the online operator sends the shop’s address to the car’s on-board navigation system, which then automatically routes the driver to the shop. This is the future of merged telematics services, such as General Motors’ OnStar, and on-board navigation systems — now best known for the nagging instruction “Please make a legal U-turn,” after the driver has disregarded some ill-considered route suggested by the computer.
The tire incident describes my own recent experience with a Chevrolet Silverado hybrid test vehicle equipped with navigation and OnStar. Telematic and navigation technology is evolving so quickly that science fiction is becoming reality.
Among the services available now: If, for example, a driver is at home, planning a trip out of town, he or she can enter destinations along the way into MapQuest using a computer’s Web browser. Directions are then sent to their car’s on-board navigation system, rather than going through the usually-tedious and time-consuming process of using the nav system’s destination entry interface.
“One of the areas of dissatisfaction for customers of screen-based navigation is the destination entry part of it,” said Tony DiSalle, OnStar’s vice president of sales and marketing. “With OnStar Destination Download, you can download a destination on the fly. All it takes is one button press to go.”
![]() |
A navigation screen is shown after an OnStar operator has sent a destination download. All the driver needs to do to be directed to the destination is press the screen's "go" button. |
Additionally, OnStar sends its customers destinations for routing through their cars’ turn-by-turn navigation systems. The OnStar information uses simple text displays rather than the familiar graphical navigation map screens.
“To me that is one of the most relevant applications of telematics, beyond safety and security,” said Magney. These simplified and streamlined methods of getting a destination into the nav system, even while driving, provide drivers with a tangible benefit that can make monthly subscription fees to such services worth the cost, he said.
Traffic density in real time
Modern navigation also can help the driver avoid traffic back-ups, storm fronts and overpriced gasoline. The navigation systems in many new cars, such as the 2009 Lincoln MKS can display traffic density on highways in real time based on data collected by traffic services, has real-time weather radar that looks just like Jim Cantore’s Weather Channel map and provides the location of nearby gas stations with fuel prices.
Lincoln’s system gets its information from the car’s Sirius XM satellite radio link, which is another data channel to cars in addition to subscription-based services using cellular technology, such as OnStar, said Magney.
“In the future, there will be a wireless ‘pipe’ to every car,” he said. Drivers’ own cell phones may well provide that connection, as they do already in Ford cars equipped with Microsoft’s Sync technology, which connects portable devices such as Bluetooth-enabled phones to cars’ electronic systems. (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)
An advantage of embedded subscription-based systems over services using drivers’ own phones has been their ability to do things such as automatically report a crash to 911 operators, or to relay vehicle maintenance status information to a dealer for possible service, although the latest edition of Sync does those things, too.
Embedded OnStar hardware has been designed to survive crashes, and the on-board cellular transmitter is more powerful than that of a portable phone, said DiSalle.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AUTO TECH |
| Add Auto Tech headlines to your news reader: |



