The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Ford product chief looking to turn car sensors into features customers will buy

- By Tom Krisher

DEARBORN, MICH. >> Across the room from Ford Advanced Product Developmen­t chief Doug Field was a pile of two-dozen auto parts, each with its own small computer, and software written by the parts manufactur­er.

Field, who was hired away from running Apple’s secret auto project two years ago, and before that served as Tesla head of engineerin­g, explained at an investor event that the automaker is moving to get rid of the pile, consolidat­ing most computing decisions into a central processor running software written by Ford.

The change will fundamenta­lly change how people use their cars. Most automakers are counting on software services to boost future profit margins.

Field, 57, also Ford’s chief technology officer, talked to The Associated Press about the change and the transforma­tion to electric vehicles. The interview is edited for length and clarity.

Q

How far along is Ford on moving to this central computing system?

AThe transition has happened where we designed the hardware and the software for the immediate user interface, the center screen. That’s gone into both the F-150 Lightning EV as well as the internal combustion F-Series. The next step is with our next generation of electric vehicles (coming in 2025). We’re expanding to control the overall vehicle and control over the autonomy system. There will be software in parts that comes from suppliers that is appropriat­e. The reason for that is to make it as fast as possible. A great example is firing the air bag. We don’t want that coming back through the central passage.

Q

AAs a driver, why should I care about this?

The car’s a robot, which means the interactio­n with the software includes pieces of hardware. So something like an Amazon interface where you know a delivery is coming. A one-time code opens the trunk. Doesn’t open the rest of the car. They get to drop it off. That requires an interactio­n between centralize­d software and what today is a lockingunl­ocking module. There also are sensors that we don’t have access to the informatio­n. An easy example is an autonomy system that’s supposed to keep you in the lane. There’s a camera. We can’t say to the customer that we’re going to give you a dash cam for free or for a subscripti­on where it’s always running. And if we detect any kind of a bump or anything like that, you’ve got a 30-second recording. We will be able to do that. We talked a little bit about our ability to predict if the car is heading toward a failure or a wear-out situation. I want to count wiper strokes combined with how much water is coming down and where it’s being driven and how dirty it is. Maybe develop an algorithm that knows exactly when your wiper blades are wearing out.

QHow do you come up with something that’s compelling enough to get me to part with my hardearned money and subscribe?

A

The model is already transition­ing from ‘you check a box when you buy the car’ to ‘you can get a free trial.’ You only part with your hard-earned money after you are on the road trying it and say, ‘this is pretty great.’ A big part of how I try to guide the engineers is you must earn the right to collect money. You’re going to come up with things, you’re going to try them.

Q

You’ve shown the bear cam, where a Bronco parked at a campsite recognizes a bear nearby and may honk the horn to scare it away. How important is security?

A

We are going to build a whole set of services around this. The car is the most sophistica­ted sensor that you have in your life, and the number of accelerome­ters and microphone­s and cameras and

things on it will allow it to be not only something that protects you when you’re in the car, but it’ll actually be useful when you’re not there. Even acting as a remote sentry if there’s stuff going on outside the house.

Q

Does having a centralize­d computer open you more to the possibilit­y of hacking?

A

Anything where you are allowing the car to be software-updated opens you to that possibilit­y. You need to have an architectu­re where that has been really carefully thought through. And the more you go toward things like firing the airbags or controllin­g the steering, the more that becomes a pretty involved process to actually update your access.

Q

How long will Ford still be selling internal combustion vehicles?

AThere are a number of applicatio­ns where it is going to be near impossible for an EV to perform the same mission. There will be many, many places where EVs are a slam dunk. There will be ones where it’s going to take a lot of work to get battery technologi­es to the point where it could serve that mission. There are ones we see now that the ICE engine needs to be a part of it. Maybe we partially electrify it, but they’ll be out there. The incrementa­l value to the world of getting those last ice engines out versus the value that they provide to an ambulance in Alaska. That will take a very, very long time.

 ?? FORD VIA AP ?? Doug Field, Ford’s chief product developmen­t and technology officer.
FORD VIA AP Doug Field, Ford’s chief product developmen­t and technology officer.

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