"TRENDBIRD (What's Next Big Thing ?)" is a Social Trend Research & Consulting Service that instantly
                 delivers to you industry Expert information on Future Trends from around the World,
                 so you can recognize Opportunities and make informed Decisions Ahead of the Curve.


  BOOKMARK            [EMERGING TRENDS]     Mobile   Consumer   Twitter   iPhone   Green   PDF



[Tech] Head-up Displays go Holographic


Compact holographic projection displays info through a two-way wing mirror for drivers


사용자 삽입 이미지
 
Car HUD They don't make car mirrors like they used to Light Blue Optics


Soon the Dark Knight and other wealthy folk may not represent the only people tearing around with a holographic heads-up display (HUD) for their rides. A new prototype unveiled today is small enough to fit inside a rear-view or wing mirror and display car speed or distance between vehicles in real time.

This holographic projection device has a far smaller size than current car HUD systems, which require large liquid-crystal arrays and optics. By contrast, the device developed by Light Blue Optics uses constructive and destructive interference of light to compose its holographic images.


사용자 삽입 이미지

Holo Navigation:  Light Blue Optics


The company designed its prototype to project an image through a two-way mirror, so that information appears superimposed over the reflected road view. The device went on display at the Society for Information Display's Vehicles and Photons 2009 symposium held in Dearborn, Michigan.

Such a device could improve driving safety by allowing drivers to get critical information without having to look away from the road. Light Blue Optics also says that their technology works just as well on forward displays, such as a car windshield. Just don't expect to drive cars with the devices for at least several more years.

사용자 삽입 이미지




[popsci]



 

[Tech] (Video) 2010 Mercedes-Benz Shows Off Cool Tech


사용자 삽입 이미지

2010 Mercedes S Class

Mercedes has a new promotional video for the 2010 S Class that offers peeks at the model range and suite of tech coming on the latest luxury sedan: the S400 Hybrid and its energy monitoring system, S500 (the S550 in the U.S.), S600, Splitview COMAND screen, new headlamps, and LEDs everywhere. Follow the jump to watch the vid and see what Mercedes has in store.






[autoblog]


 

[Tech] Nissan Slip-Alert Shows the Road Ahead


 

사용자 삽입 이미지

Just in time for winter, Nissan is expanding testing of two new applications for its CARWINGS telematics system. Road Cam broadcasts real time images of mountain roads that are known to become impassable due to snow and ice, while Slip Alert uses the navigation screen to display hazardous curves where other drivers have lost control of their Nissans.

The system is being tested in Hokkaido, where road conditions on the mountains can deteriorate rapidly and where cameras already film the most dangerous curves for research purposes. Starting in November, Road Cam will broadcast those images to CARWINGS-equipped dashboards every fifteen minutes. Slip Alert relies on empirical data of ABS and traction control use in other CARWINGS-equipped cars. If another Nissan has spun out on the curve up ahead, your nav system will tell you to slow down. We like to think of it as an electronic version of grandpa sitting in the backseat pointing out the spot he wrecked his Chevy Monza on his way home from work during the Blizzard of '78.

Sadly for Armada owners in Fargo, slip alert and road cam are yet two more technological advances from Nissan that won't be available outside of Japan.

Japan's Civil Engineering Research Institute for Cold Region (CERI) is obsessed with amassing as much winter driving safety data possible. Research vehicles equipped with skid sensors and other gadgets routinely travel to the scenes of weather-related wrecks to gather data that is used to prevent the same accident from happening again. One CERI research program involves filming the most dangerous passes in Hokkaido. Those images are the cornerstone of Road Cam which is intended to inform drivers about impassable conditions ahead while they are still at the base of the mountains where conditions may be less severe.

While maps of accidents and fatalities already exist online, Slip Alert is the first to gather data from three sources: your car, other Nissans currently on the road, and traffic statistics from previous years. When a Nissan slips up ahead, CARWINGS transmits that data to your navigation system which informs you of the potential of skid danger through a voice alert and an icon on the nav screen. Nissan has been testing Slip Alert in Sapporo City with 100 test cars since November of 2007.

According to a Nissan press release, Skid Alert works. "The alert is effective in helping drivers become more watchful of road conditions and to drive more cautiously at lower speeds," Nissan said. "It also showed that drivers continued to consciously drive safely even in areas where no skid incidents were recorded." As helpful as Skid Alert seems, we're sure going to miss catching up with spun-out SUVs that moments earlier flew past us on a snowy highway, blissfully ignorant of the hazards ahead.

사용자 삽입 이미지


Video Clip


[dvice]


 

[Business] The Digital Car Is the Next Big Market


사용자 삽입 이미지

[image from google]


In parallel to the Web and mobile devices, a new marketplace for applications and services is becoming accessible to entrepreneurs and developers — the Digital Car.

Over the last five years, consumers around the world have started bringing their own “off-deck” communications and infotainment solutions into their cars, including mobile phones, personal navigation devices, iPods, satellite radios, DVD players and more. The market for in-car electronics and services has surged to $27 billion over an installed base of 210 million cars, according to the Consumer Electronics Association.

As a result, a whole industry has sprung up around selling car-related technologies through dealerships, retailers (such as Best Buy and Circuit City), and online vendors (such as Amazon and Walmart.com). In addition, media companies such as Clear Channel and XM/Sirius have emerged, delivering audio entertainment and text data such as traffic to drivers.

Yet, despite this barrage of new devices and services coming into the car, automobile manufacturers (OEMs) continue to turn out vehicles equipped with 3-5 year-old navigation products; tightly control human-machine interfaces (HMIs) including in-dash touchscreens, voice interfaces, side-controls and telematics offerings; and they still tediously vet new technologies through their Tier 1 and Tier 2 suppliers. Meanwhile, their margins and bottom lines have been sustained through relentless supply chain management, aggressive branding, channel control and jealous protection of high-margin components such as air-conditioning, stereo systems and navigation. Most consumers would point to only a few major innovations in the auto OEM market in the past several years, namely, Bluetooth, iPod integration and hybrid electric cars.

Consequently, early-stage venture investors have historically stayed away from investing in automobile information technologies. But today’s “closed-garden” automobile eco-system is now opening up to application developers. While there is no dominant computing platform to build to for cars, automotive OEMs are feeling the pressure from consumer electronics devices and are slowly adopting third-party technologies – witness Ford’s successful introduction of the Sync, the recent awarding of telematics and connected services contracts by Chrysler and Mercedes to Hughes Telematics, and BMW’s collaboration with Google.

Entrepreneurs and developers aren’t waiting for the OEMs to lead the way, of course. With the large-scale consumer adoption of electronics devices in the car and wireless connectivity for CE devices, they’re starting to build new companies for this Digital Car marketplace. These application companies (some of which are mentioned below) are combining cloud computing resources with cheap wireless connectivity, access to any information or services on the Web, GPS location technology and new ad-supported and subscription business models. As a result, applications built around location, social media, communications, entertainment and a greener lifestyle are now all possible.

And finally, in terms of channels available to reach the consumer, application developers have an increasing number of options:

  • Mobile applications vendors — mobile applications (whether server-based or device-resident) can be used on mobile devices in the car but with a greater emphasis on voice interaction and location. Interesting areas to target include the iPhone and GPS-enabled phones. While this is a fairly well understood ecosystem, mobile user interfaces are not well suited for the driver, and it’s still a challenge to work with mobile operators for on-deck distribution and monetization or to market directly to consumers through mobile ads, the iPhone App Store or GetJar. Still, we’re seeing some successes. Telenav, Yelp, uLocate’s Where(a Venrock company), and Google Maps Mobile are good examples of driver-friendly applications.
  • Voice applications providers — dialing by voice is something all drivers are used to and several new server-side voice applications are now coming to drivers’ aid. Extending beyond hands-free dialing, these services cover access to email, news, podcasts, voice texting, music, etc. Some vendors such as TellMe, Free411, Dial2Do, and DialDirections could start distributing third-party voice applications.

  • Personal navigation device vendors — Connected GPS devices running Win CE and Linux are being launched, with Dash and TomTom being prime examples. Garmin, Magellan, Mio, Navigon and other OEMs are also going to be launching connected PNDs in the next 12 months and are looking for innovative applications.

  • Telematics service providers — vendors such as Hughes Telematics, ATX, OnStar and Wireless Car are signing up automotive OEMs. You could include Microsoft in this category as well with its Ford Sync launch. While this revival in telematics is still new, there’s a chance for developers to distribute through these vendors.

  • Original Design Manufacturers (ODMs) — ODMs in Asia such as Foxconn and Inventec are producing function-specific devices for use in the car. A developer could partner with these to go to market. Vendors such as PLX and Slacker are in this market. The downside is that entrepreneurs have to get their own distribution through retail chains, dealer networks and online retailers.

  • Electric car companies – new auto OEMs including Think, Reva, Tesla, Better Place and Fisker are entering the market and are willing to make much faster decisions, so developers may want to target these companies. The downside is that volumes are small and uncertain currently. VentureBeat listed a whole set of these companies here.

  • Automotive OEMs – developers could target auto OEMs as a horizon 2 strategy — computing platforms are getting better with 400-500 Mhz processors, 100+ GB hard-drives, etc. For example, BMW, Intel and WindRiver are working together on a Linux solution for the car through Moblin.org. Expect three- to seven-year decision and deployment cycles, although connected services strategies will enable automotive OEMs to iterate and deliver new applications over-the-air much faster in the next few years.

Dev Khare is vice president of VC firm Venrock in Palo Alto, Calif. He has a background in product management, marketing and international finance.

[venturebeat]



 

[Tech] Opel Eye Camera reads Road Signs


사용자 삽입 이미지

The Opel Eye Camera system is a Traffic Sign Recognition and Lane Departure Warning system available early next year in new model opel vauxhall insignia cars, which scans the road ahead at 30 frames per second to read road signs and tell you when you're wandering from your lane.

The Traffic Sign Detection can read speed limit and no-passing signs and even notify drivers when speed restrictions have been lifted. Depending on light conditions, the system begins to recognize and repeatedly read signs at 100 meters.

The Opel Eye camera also checks whether drivers stay in their chosen lane on the highway. This helps prevent a dangerous situation, such as a driver falling asleep at the wheel. Lane Departure Warning can be switched on or off via a button. When active, it warns the driver with a gong sound and a blinking signal on the instrument panel.

[LikeCool]