Internet of Things

Here’s how your car will get smarter in 2017

Via Verizon Wireless Newsroom

Nov 30, 2016

As 2016 comes to an end, we've asked our top technologists to share their predictions and insights about the most disruptive tech trends that lie ahead. As part of our Tech Trends 2017 series , Amit Jain of Verizon Telematics shares his predictions about how the smart car trend will accelerate in the coming year.

1. Existing cars will become more like smart cars.

Obviously, the next year will get us closer to autonomous vehicles. But there will also be a harder push toward autonomous features in the vehicles we're driving today. We're already seeing safety features such as automatic braking assistance and lane departure warnings in new cars. But what about the millions of cars that are already on the road, and will be for years?

Right now we're trying to bring some of those new-car safety features to vehicles that are currently in use, in addition to more of the infotainment features that we've seen trending in the past few years. One feature we're excited about is the ability to put low-cost cameras or even mounted smartphones in cars that will sound an alarm when drivers veer over the middle line.

In addition to safety features, the other big trend is car sharing, both on the consumer and commercial sides. Consumers are going to want the option of capabilities that make car sharing easier and more convenient.

2. The convergence of smart cars and smart cities.

Soon, our cars will be able to communicate with the infrastructure around us, which will be a big feature of smart cities. A good example of this is traffic signals. The way most of them work now is based on time elapsed—30 seconds, a minute, two minute intervals—and then the signals are switched. Imagine when there’s full communication between the infrastructure and every vehicle. The signals will change based on the traffic flow rather than time elapsed. We'll no longer have that frustrating experience of just sitting there, the only vehicle in sight, waiting for a two-minute traffic signal to change. This kind of technology is already being tested in controlled environments such as the University of Michigan campus, and other pilot areas that we're participating in.

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