
Get ready for vehicles talking to drivers, other vehicles, and infrastructure.
As cloud technology becomes an integral part of life from controlling indoor temperature to coordinating between hospitals, several automobile companies are also beginning to hop on board.
Japanese car manufacturer Toyota is the most recent jump onāand in a big way.
The carmaker announced the creation of a separate, Plano, Texas-based company, Toyota Connected on Monday. The firm will collect and analyze data regarding customersā driving habits using Microsoft Azure. The data will then be used to develop products along the lines of automatic break technology or accident warning systems by linking up data from multiple drivers.
Toyota already has some data services, but it currently only has the capability to operate a fraction of its cars that way. Toyota Connected represents an attempt for the company to āfully leverageā cloud computing, reported Nikkeiās Asian Review. The company has a market cap of $5 million.
āSo in the future weāre going to have, not just vehicles talking to individuals, but vehicles that are talking to other vehicles who will also be talking to infrastructure,ā Toyota Connected CEO Zack Hicks said in a video. āWhen youāre looking for a parking spot you donāt have to drive around the block five timesā¦we can let you know where thereās an available spot.ā
Toyota joins a group of automobile industry veterans who are going āsmart.ā Detroit-based Ford F -1.68% also announced a partnership with Microsoft a few weeks earlier. The company said it planned to release a batch of cars later this year with connection to WiFi, allowing consumers to update the carās entertainment, navigation, and communication systems regularly. That task originally required a USB stick.
According to Ford, cloud connected services will also allow for other upgrades, such as remotely checking whether an electric car is fully charged, or finding the car if a user forgot where he or she parked it.
Of course, Toyota Connected will be collecting information from consumersāwhich could run into some privacy concerns in the future. Toyota acknowledged that issue in the press release, saying that the company has āa fundamental commitment to personal privacy.ā
According to the Nikkei Asian Review, Microsoft has a 5% stake in the new company.