Thomas Bloor
Business Development Manager, BlackBerry
If you’ve been to CES chances are you’ve seen one of our concept cars,
even if you’ve not been to our booth, we take these to our industry
partners. Now as we start gearing up for next year’s CES there are some great
innovations in the pipeline. (I’ve seen them, but I’m not telling.) So as I
can’t spill the beans on what's coming, but let’s take a look at some of my favorite
QNX Concept Cars from years past.
The Porsche 911 Carrera (CES 2012)
Admittedly I have a soft spot for performance cars, but the Porsche
deserves headline billing in the roster as a CNet "Best of CES" winner. With
revolutionary (for 2012), cloud-based voice recognition you could control the
navigation system using natural language. And, text-to-speech meant that you
could listen to incoming BBMs, emails and text messages. Rounding out the
roster of features that would still be considered ahead of the curve for a
production car today, this model featured one-touch Bluetooth pairing. Simply touching
your phone to an NFC reader in the center console automatically paired the
phone and car.
The Bentley Continental GT (CES
2013)
In an outburst of Canadian quirkiness, we decided that when better to do
a photoshoot of a Bentley Convertible than in the middle of the Canadian
winter? Of course despite the -20C (-4F) weather we’d have to have the top
down!
The cold and the snow do not detract from the revolutionary center stack with DLP® display from Texas Instruments. This immense (for 2013) featured an organically curved surface and TI’s optical touch input technology, which allowed physical control knobs to be mounted directly on the screen resulting in an ideal balance in physical and touchscreen controls
Taking natural language voice recognition a step further we worked with AT&T’s WatsonSM . Say "Hello Bentley," and the car's voice recognition system immediately starts interacting with you, in a distinctly British accent, old chap.
If that weren’t
enough, the cluster displays the back-up camera and user configurable high
resolution instrumentation. We also took the mobile office to new heights with
smartphone integration with streaming music, email notification, news feeds, and
other real-time information. Put the Bentley into park and you could fire up video conferencing with realistic telepresence.
Separate cameras for the driver
and passenger provide independent video streams, while high-definition voice
technology from QNX offers expanded bandwidth for greater realism, while stereo
telepresence makes the remote caller sound as if they’re sitting right next to
you.
Mercedes CLA 45 AMG (CES 2014)
Have you looked inside a Mercedes S class recently? The horizontally
orientated center stack display extends across the dash. Coincidentally our
2014 Mercedes concept had a 21-inch-wide center display extending towards the
passenger enabling a seamless interaction with the vehicle.
Behind the scenes the Cluster was integrated with the center stack
running both driver information and IVI functions. With seamless
controllability across the touch screen, physical buttons and the jog wheel
controls multi-modal input was highlighted across all available functionality.
Not content with that, we foreshadowed greater integration of ADAS
functionality warnings to the driver through both the cluster and verbally through
text to speech if the local speed limits were exceeded.
Jeep Wrangler and Toyota Highlander
Now it’s not all high end luxury cars, which is just as well because they
never let me drive any of them. Our Jeep Wrangler and Toyota Highlanders serve
as our QNX reference vehicles showcasing what the
QNX CAR application platform can do, straight out of the box. Additionally, the
Toyota features our advances in in-car communication and acoustics platforms
enabling an enhanced user experience for drivers and passengers.
These cars are not just "show floor wonders" because our
automotive knowledge enables us to build demonstrators for the real world, which
can be driven, and the technology can be experienced first-hand. Concept clusters and
displays abound, but real vehicle bus integration means these cars are drivable
with real instrumentation and connectivity.
While I can’t reveal what new exciting
technologies we are planning for CES 2017 (believe me, you’ll want to come and
take a look), I can say that our reference vehicles are currently on tour so
keep an eye open for them on the roads near you.