Click here to learn
about this Sponsor:
Home  |  News  |  Articles  |  Polls  |  Forum

Keywords: Match:
Bluetooth, Wi-fi expected on 25 million vehicles within 5 years
Oct. 01, 2003

Adoption of Bluetooth has been steadily increasing since its OEM automotive debut in the 2003 Saab 9-3. Although Bluetooth will continue its momentum in new 2004 models from Acura, Audi, Lexus, Lincoln, Maybach, and Toyota, to name a few, its role will be limited, according to the findings of a new research study from ABI.

Protocols based on 802.11, such as DSRC (Dedicated Short Range Communications), promise to fill the need for longer range, higher bandwidth applications that will not only link vehicles with roadside data access points, but between each other. Ratification of the new DSRC protocol is expected by the end of 2004, with aftermarket automotive offerings quickly following suit. Aftermarket 802.11-based automotive products will appear by the end of this year, initially focused on entertainment applications.



"While Bluetooth serves as an ideal automotive PAN (personal area network) protocol, it is not meant to be a 'do-it-all' technology," states Frank Viquez, ABI Director of Automotive Electronics and report author. "There are a myriad of other wireless technologies currently under evaluation for inter and intra-vehicle safety, telematics, commerce, information, and entertainment-type applications. These partially include Ultra Wideband, RFID (radio frequency identification), DSRC, 802.11, 802.16 (WiMAX), and satellite."

Despite the multitude of wireless technologies currently under scrutiny for their automotive potential, ABI's study sees Bluetooth and 802.11 as the early favorites. According to the study, the global installed base of vehicles with factory-fitted Bluetooth or 802.11-based hardware will reach 25 million vehicles in 2008.

The new ABI study, "Automotive Wireless Networks: Opportunities for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, RFID, Satellite and Other Emerging Wireless Technologies," provides insight into current and future automotive applications, from telephony and telematics applications, to safety and cashless payment systems. The study outlays the automotive market potential for wireless local and personal area networks (WLAN and PAN), and adjunct devices such as PDAs, handsets, and headsets. The study also provides a comprehensive player profiles section, and concludes with a detailed list of international market participants.

ABI is a N.Y.-based technology market research firm founded in 1990. ABI publishes market research and technology intelligence on the wireless, automotive, electronics, networking and energy industries. Details can be found on the web at abiresearch.com or by calling 516-624-3113.


Copyright © 2003, Allied Business Intelligence Inc. (ABI). All rights reserved. Reproduced by LinuxDevices.com with permission.



Related stories:


(Click here for further information)


7 Advantages of D2D Backup
For decades, tape has been the backup medium of choice. But, now, disk-to-disk (D2D) backup is gaining in favor. Learn why you should make the move in this whitepaper.

4 Legal Reasons to Control Internet Access
The Internet is obviously a valuable resource for many organizations. However, many are exposed to legal liability concerns because they fail to control Internet access. Learn if you're safe in this white paper.

Rapidly Resolve J2EE Application Problems
Whether you are in the process of building J2EE applications or have J2EE applications already running in production, you must ensure that they deliver the expected ROI. Learn how in this white paper.

Load Testing 2.0 for Web 2.0
There are many unknowns in stress testing Web 2.0 applications. Find out how to test the performance of Web 2.0 in this white paper.

Build Better Games Online
For the game infrastructure providers, life is complex. Making money from games has become more complicated. Why? Find out in this white paper.

Building a Virtual Infrastructure from Servers to Storage
This white paper discusses the virtual storage solutions that reduce cost, increase storage utilization, and address the challenges of backing up and restoring Server environments.

Gaining Faster Wireless Connections with WiMAX
Welcome to what is quickly becoming the hyperconnected world where anything that would benefit from being connected to the network will be connected. Learn more in this white paper.

Is Your Desktop a Security Threat?
The new wave of sophisticated crimeware not only targets specific companies, but also targets desktops and laptops as backdoor entryways into those business’ operations and resources. Learn how to stay safe in this white paper.

Increasing SAN Reliability by 100 Percent
Storage area networks (SAN) are a strong part of storage plans. Learn how to increase your reliability and uptime by 100 percent in this case study.

 


Got a HOT tip?   please tell us!
Free weekly newsletter
Enter your email...
Click here for a profile of each sponsor:
PLATINUM SPONSORS
GOLD SPONSORS
(Become a sponsor)

ADVERTISEMENT
(Advertise here)

Check out the latest Linux powered...

mobile phones!

other cool
gadgets



BREAKING NEWS

• Linux video camera geo-tags, writes to SATA drives
• Garmin Nav devices run Gnome Linux
• Ten LiMo phones this month?
• It's a Yankee Doodle Linux phone
• Wind River to host "Developer Day"
• Dev boards gain Linux support
• 802.11n zooms ahead
• Low-power mini-ITX board runs Linux
• Pico-ITX board bears twins
• Mass-market WiFi router invites Linux hackers
• LiMo phone specialist buys app stack
• "PDA phone" runs Linux
• ST, NXP spin phone chip JV
• Military-grade USB key supports Linux
• USB Linux systems expand


Most popular stories -- past 30 days:
• World's cheapest Linux-based laptop?
• Ubuntu ported to a PDA
• 64-way chip gains Linux IDE, dev cards, design wins
• Embedded PowerPC dev kits come with Linux
• Rapid time-to-evaluation -- a key goal for silicon providers
• Embedded Linux is doomed. DOOOMED!
• Rugged PDA available with Linux
• Netflix Player runs Linux
• Miniature Linux PC targets military apps
• $7 SoC runs Linux
• Android Developer Challenge announces first-round winners
• Dual-core ARM SoC clocks to 1.2GHz


Linux-Watch headlines:
• Microsoft tactics push India toward Linux
• Bell, SuperMicro sued over GPL
• "Business intelligence" software goes GPL
• Will Atom bomb?
• LF Summit videos posted
• Linux gains "embedded" maintainers
• Virtualization on tap in SLES and RHEL upgrades
• Linux gets security black eye
• Verizon chooses Linux "platform of choice"
• Hats off to Fedora 9


Also visit our sister site:


Sign up for LinuxDevices.com's...

news feed

Home  |  News  |  Articles  |  Polls  |  Forum  |  About  |  Contact
 

Ziff Davis Enterprise Home | Contact Us | Advertise | Link to Us | Reprints | Magazine Subscriptions | Newsletters
Tech RSS Feeds | White Papers | ROI Calculators | Tech Podcasts | Tech Video | VARs | Channel News

Baseline | Careers | Channel Insider | CIO Insight | DesktopLinux | DeviceForge | DevSource | eSeminars |
eWEEK | Enterprise Network Security | LinuxDevices | Linux Watch | Microsoft Watch | Mid-market | Networking | PDF Zone |
Publish | Security IT Hub | Strategic Partner | Web Buyer's Guide | Windows for Devices

Developer Shed | Dev Shed | ASP Free | Dev Articles | Dev Hardware | SEO Chat | Tutorialized | Scripts |
Code Walkers | Web Hosters | Dev Mechanic | Dev Archives | igrep

Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Except where otherwise specified, the contents of this site are copyright © 1999-2008 Ziff Davis Enterprise Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Ziff Davis Enterprise is prohibited. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.