Toronto Star

Google unveils improved software for car infotainme­nt consoles

Android system can control temperatur­e, seat positionin­g, as well as popular apps

- MARK GURMAN AND MARK BERGEN BLOOMBERG

Android already powers most smartphone­s on Earth. Now Google is placing its mobile operating system right inside cars, a bid to cement its core service in the auto industry as more technology sweeps in.

On Monday, ahead of its I/O mobile developers’ conference, Alphabet Inc.’s Google is showing off its next step in automotive software: an Android version of touchscree­n car consoles and infotainme­nt systems. It will host popular applicatio­ns, such as Google Maps and Spotify, but also control car features such as seat positionin­g and temperatur­e.

The new system also embeds the Google Assistant — the company’s voice control service, for searching on the go, asking for directions and making phone calls — in cars for the first time.

At I/O, Google will show off live demonstrat­ions of the operating system running on the Audi Q8 and Volvo V90 SUVs. Patrick Brady, a vice-president of engineerin­g for Android, said the system will make its way to Audi and Volvo’s entire fleets, along with other manufactur- ers. Google showed a concept of the software running on a Chrysler vehicle earlier this year. Alphabet shares rose less than 1 per cent to $959.22 at 4:55 p.m. in New York.

This isn’t Google’s first stab at software for cars. In 2014, the tech giant introduced Android Auto, a system that lets people project content from their Android smartphone­s to their car’s screen. Brady said Android Auto now runs on 300 car models.

The new system plunges deeper, taking over the underlying software on the car. A driver doesn’t need to plug in an Android phone to run it. It also adds some features, such as 3D mapping and satellite images, that Android Auto lacks. Brady said this fusion of apps and controls inside a car is necessary. “Where cars are going, everything is integrated into one display,” he said. “We think the future is a much more seamless, integrated system.”

Other software companies have pitched a similar system. BlackBerry’s QNX division powers the sys- tems inside of more than 50 million cars currently on the road, including models from Ford Motor Co. and Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz. Samsung spent $8 billion (U.S.) for Harman Internatio­nal Inc., a leading supplier of in-car entertainm­ent services. And some car companies, such as Toyota, have invested in their own features, highlighti­ng manufactur­er’s concerns with ceding a critical consumer experience to tech companies.

Apple, which currently offers the CarPlay product that’s similar in practice to Android Auto, is also working on its own car operating system to power its self-driving software, Bloomberg has reported. Brady said that Apple’s CarPlay could run on top of cars with the embedded Android system.

While Google isn’t getting a sales cut from its new system, the company has an interest in keeping Apple and Amazon, which has reached agreements with carmakers for its own digital assistant, from capturing the vehicle software market. Brady said Google was not taking any critical vehicle tracking informatio­n with the new system.

Bloomberg received a preview of an Android-based infotainme­nt system running on a Volvo. This version of the software had three main windows for users: a central panel for playing music, making calls and navi-

“Everything is integrated into one display. We think the future is a much more seamless, integrated system.” PATRICK BRADY ANDROID VP OF ENGINEERIN­G

gating; another with a grid of core car functions; and a third that lists installed Android apps. A button on the steering wheel and a voice command can activate the Google Assistant.

Google wouldn’t say when the first models will hit the streets. And it’s operating system didn’t look completely finished. For example, a dropdown menu for quickly accessing settings was not yet active in a demonstrat­ion.

Each Android software car partner will have the ability to customize the controls, interface, and applicatio­ns pre-loaded into the operating system, the company said. For now, Brady said Google is not pre-installing a slate of its own apps, as it does with Android phones. Android for the car might eventually extend to dashboard items such as speedomete­rs and back-seat screens.

Yet Google executives said the software will not reach to instrument­s critical to car safety — it’s keeping YouTube off the screen, for instance, given the risk to distractin­g drivers.

The new car feature also hints at Google’s long-term ambitions to spread its artificial intelligen­ce service to every corner of consumer’s lives. For example, a user in a compatible car could ask the Assistant to turn on the lights at home before arriving, Brady said. That assumes car owners have compatible smart home hardware.

Google said it’s working on bringing the voice assistant to Android Auto. Apple’s CarPlay system is already compatible with its voice assistantS­iri for sending text messages and navigation, but unlike Android’s new system, Apple’s cannot control car functions such as temperatur­e.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The new system embeds Google Assistant in cars for the first time.
MATT ROURKE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The new system embeds Google Assistant in cars for the first time.

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