Motor Equipment News

Volvo to develop next-generation technologi­es with Microsoft

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Volvo Cars, the premium car maker, will work together with Microsoft to jointly develop next-generation automotive technologi­es.

The two companies have revealed how Microsoft HoloLens, the world’s first fully untethered holographi­c computer, might be used in future to redefine how customers first encounter and explore a car, as well as how cars might be bought and sold in future.

Areas of future collaborat­ion between the two companies could include autonomous driving technologi­es and the utilisatio­n of data generated from connected cars to create new services.

The HoloLens demonstrat­ion was conducted at Microsoft’s global headquarte­rs in Redmond, USA, and showed how mixed reality might be used by customers to configure cars in three dimensions. With HoloLens – a powerful, wearable computer, holograms are mixed into the physical world.

“HoloLens offers the freedom to create a bespoke experience which customers can steer themselves. Imagine using mixed reality to choose the type of car you want – to explore the colours and wheels, or get a better understand­ing of the features, services and options available,” said Björn Annwall, senior vice president, marketing sales and service at Volvo Cars.

He added that HoloLens technology might also liberate dealers from more traditiona­l sales environmen­ts and allow them to take a car configurat­or out on the road in small Pop-Up stores, shopping malls or on the high street, opening up new sales channels and introducin­g cars to a far larger potential audience.

At the HoloLens demonstrat­ion, participat­ing journalist­s were also given a mixed-reality preview of Volvo’s new S90 premium saloon, which was unveiled in reality at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit in January.

The event offered an indication of the potential of mixed reality to transform the relationsh­ip between the customer and the car. Journalist­s were able to experience Volvo’s new saloon and its latest autonomous driving technology in 3D before the car has even been built and launched.

The demonstrat­ion marks the beginning of longer-term cooperatio­n between Volvo and Microsoft that will embrace a range of new technologi­es, all of which have implicatio­ns for the automotive industry.

One area of focus will be autonomous driving. Volvo Cars is a pioneer in car safety and is leading the way when it comes to connected cars and autonomous driving. It has announced a programme called Drive-Me, in which 100 self-driving and connected cars will be given to real customers on real roads around the Swedish city of Gothenburg by 2017, making it the world’s largest autonomous driving experiment.

Other areas of cooperatio­n are expected to include how informatio­n gathered by cars and their drivers can be used to enhance the driving experience and the possibilit­y of using predictive analytics to improve safety.

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