SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dennis Roth who wrote (2032)8/8/2000 11:27:18 AM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 197629
 
The Web on wheels

By Dennis Fisher, eWEEK

Wireless services eyed for cars; will customers bite?

The future of in-vehicle communications is starting to come into focus. Last
week, Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:F_pb - news) and Qualcomm Inc.
(Nasdaq:QCOM - news) announced a joint venture to deliver Web services to cars. The new company,
dubbed Wingcast, will be charged with making mobile Web access as ubiquitous as car radios. General
Motors Corp. (NYSE:GM - news) plans a similar offering this fall.

But unless the market changes dramatically between now and then, these symphonies of Web services may be
playing to an empty house. The primary reason: the increase in wireless Web access from cell phones and
PDAs (personal digital assistants).

"Why do you want to build [wireless services] into a car when all of this is available
on a cell phone or a PDA, and that market is growing like crazy?" asked Art
Spinella, an analyst at CNW Marketing/Research Inc., in Bandon, Ore. "I don't
think this has legs at all."

CNW's research seems to back that up. Just 8 percent of consumers surveyed said
they would be willing to consider in-vehicle Web access as an option if it was
priced at $25 a month. GM's OnStar service costs roughly $40 a month; Ford said
its Wingcast offering would be in the $10- to $30-per-month range.

The manufacturers beg to differ with CNW's findings. Within the next few months,
GM will debut what it's calling the first Internet-enabled vehicles, the 2001 Cadillac
DeVille and Seville. The auto maker plans to have Web access in 32 of its 54
models by the end of next year.

In addition to the standard luxury-car fare, the new GM models will come equipped with the OnStar Virtual
Advisor, an a la carte menu of Web services that includes e-mail, news, weather, sports scores and stock
quotes.

Drivers will be able to forward messages from e-mail accounts to the OnStar service, which will then read them
back via a text-to-speech engine. All the services will be voice-activated to minimize distractions for the driver.

In an effort to eliminate the redundant functionality of in-car Web services, Ford and GM plan to make their
in-car Web services available on customers' cell phones, which they can then plug into their vehicles.

"We're trying to leverage the vehicle as a communications node," said Chet Huber, president of OnStar, in
Troy, Mich. "We want to take advantage of the technology that's already there."

The automakers aren't jumping into this field—known as telematics— blindly. GM's OnStar service, which
includes roadside assistance, emergency services and vehicle tracking, has been available with Cadillacs for
several years and now claims close to 500,000 subscribers. Ford's Lincoln brand has a similar service, called
RESCU.

But the advent of reliable, high-speed wireless Internet connections has the executives in Detroit salivating at the
potential for a renewable revenue stream, not to mention access to a broader range of customer data in the
form of personal news and information preferences.

GM, of Detroit, plans a My OnStar Web page where subscribers can set preferences for what information and
entertainment content they want delivered to their vehicles. The manufacturer will then be able to use that data
to track the demographics and interests of its customers.

But the automakers face an uphill battle trying to transform these services into real moneymakers, analysts say.

"The OEMs hope to make money on telematics, but ... providing wireless services is not their core
competency," said Jonathan Lawrence, tele matics analyst at investment bank Dain Rauscher Wessels Inc., in
New York. "Relying on telematics to bolster shareholder value would be like trying to tow an aircraft carrier
with a rowboat."

The automakers have faith that the public won't be able to live without these services, eventually. "Customers
have taken a little while to catch up with the technology," said Michael Smith, manager of business strategy for
Ford's Telematics operations, in Dearborn, Mich. "But once word gets out, demand will follow."



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (2032)8/12/2000 11:08:49 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197629
 
Russian Lullaby

It could be lights out for 3G gear based on U.S.
mobile standards
teledotcom.com