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Cars soon will roll into the app store

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Staff Writers
New York (UPI) Feb 20, 2011
Auto engineers, racing to keep up with rapid computer innovation, are designing smartcars that can talk to smartphones.

To ensure that electronics, governing everything from navigation to braking, do not become obsolete in months, they are crafting vehicles flexible enough to adapt to unforeseen advances.

"Cars need to be upgraded -- over the air -- and they have to have smartphone connections now," Erik Goldman, president of Hughes Telematics, told The New York Times.

That means being able to draw diagnostic information from a car by a satellite link, or to reprogram a transmission controller or recalibrate braking while the car is parked at home, without a trip to the dealer.

Cisco has developed an experimental dashboard that consists of LCD panels instead of dials and buttons. It is one big touch screen where drivers can drag and drop instruments and information displays. It will

be able to accommodate yet-to-be-invented systems that could give vehicle-to-vehicle collision warnings or apprise drivers of dangerous intersections ahead.

As vehicles use more advanced computers to improve performance and fuel efficiency they need more sophisticated programming.

"The car is becoming the most sophisticated piece of computer equipment you own," said Dave Evans, Cisco's chief futurist.

earlier related report
China's auto sales hit new high in January
Beijing (AFP) Feb 18, 2011 - Auto sales in China, the world's largest car market, hit a monthly record of 1.89 million in January, data from an industry group showed Friday.

Sales last month rose 13.81 percent year on year, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) said on its website.

Around 1.53 million passenger cars were sold in January, up 16.17 percent year on year, it said, while sales of commercial vehicles rose 4.89 percent to around 365,000.

Analysts attributed the bigger-than-expected growth to strong consumer spending and surging industrial demand for cars as China's economy continues to see blistering expansion.

"General consumer spending is expected to remain strong," Xia Ping, a Shanghai-based analyst with securities firm Core Pacific-Yamaichi, told AFP.

"Sales in large heavy vehicles increased rapidly in January partly due to infrastructure construction within China... and rising transportation demand amid the country's economic recovery."

Auto output in January went up 11.33 percent on year to 1.80 million units, the CAAM said.

China overtook the United States in 2009 to become the world's largest car market, which has made it hugely important for foreign manufacturers.

Auto sales in the country rose more than 32 percent last year to a record 18.06 million units as the economy quickly powered out of the financial crisis to grow by 10.3 percent in 2010, the fastest pace since 2007.

But growth in car sales is expected to ease this year as the government phases out policy incentives such as subsidies and introduces measures to restrict purchases.

US auto giant General Motors has said it expects its sales to grow at a slower pace of 10-15 percent in China this year.



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EU sets new limits on CO2 emissions for vans
Strasbourg (AFP) Feb 15, 2011
The European parliament signed off Tuesday on new carbon dioxide restrictions for commercial vans to cut fuel costs and limit emissions blamed for global warming. The parliament voted for new rules that will require automakers to limit CO2 emissions from new light commercial vehicles by 14 percent to an average 175 grammes per kilometre by 2017. The legislation sets an emissions target o ... read more







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