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Renault-Nissan forms tie-up with Google

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SOUTHFIELD: Renault SA, Nissan Motor Co and Mitsubishi Motors Corp are about to do what many carmakers have been trying to avoid: let Google into the dashboard.

The French-Japanese auto alliance announced a technology partnershi­p that will make its vehicles among the first to use Google’s Android operating system in the dashboard, letting Alphabet Inc’s software control mapping and navigation, infotainme­nt and a suite of apps directly installed in the car.

Most carmakers allow Android Auto and Apple Inc’s CarPlay into the dashboard only by plugging in a smartphone and projecting a limited number of apps onto the vehicle’s touchscree­n.

Most carmakers have tried to keep Google and Apple at arm’s length, hoping to keep control of such valuable data as a driver’s whereabout­s, driving patterns, shopping preference­s and infotainme­nt use.

Automakers have also sought to forge their own commercial partnershi­ps to sell connected services, rather than let tech players like Google cash in.

“We’re merging our forces to build a better system,” said Kal Mos, global vice-president of connected vehicles for the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance. “If you forget your phone, it will work perfectly fine in the car,” he said of Google’s system.

Volvo Cars has announced that it would start using Android in 2020, but no other carmaker has, said Mike Ramsey, a research director at Gartner Inc.

With Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi, drivers will be able to have their favourite Android-based apps, music and other services piped directly into the car. They will also be able to control them by voice using Google Assistant.

Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi customers who have Apple iPhones could continue to project apps onto the touchscree­n the way they do now, Mos said.

It will be up to each automaker to craft its individual in-car experience using Android’s operating system and to plan when they will offer it in specific models, starting in 2021.

Control of driver and vehicle data has been a sticky issue for carmakers. While Google makes billions of dollars by tracking Internet search patterns for advertiser­s, automakers have walled off diagnostic data about the vehicle’s performanc­e from infotainme­nt systems.

Some use their own navigation systems that give drivers an alternativ­e to Google’s or Apple’s maps.

When Android is incorporat­ed into Alliance vehicles, navigation will be done with Google Maps, but diagnostic data will be in a separate system.

As with any app on a phone, Android users in future RenaultNis­san-Mitsubishi models would have the option of agreeing to share their data or not using the app, said Patrick Brady, vice-president of engineerin­g for Android. “In the majority of cases, the Android platform user has to give consent,” Brady said in a phone interview.

Volvo’s plans to install Android into the head unit put pressure on bigger automakers to give their drivers the same experience and access to more Android-based apps, Ramsey said. — Bloomberg

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