Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Apple’s next big app for the iPhone: Starting your car

By | Motoramic19 hours ago
When the Apple iPhone first appeared, its presence flummoxed automakers which typically need a couple of years minimum to adapt to new technology. Today, most automakers offer their own apps for some of their more technologically advanced models, up to Volkswagen designing a special-edition Beetle as an iPhone accessory. But now Apple has its own ideas about what the iPhone could do beyond play music — namely, replacing your key fob for locking and starting.

In a U.S. patent application made public last week titled "Accessing a Vehicle Using Public Devices," Apple engineers described a method for using two iPhones and a vehicle's Bluetooth wireless connection to not only lock and unlock the doors, but start the engine and track the vehicle's movements via GPS. Apple envisions the iPhone becoming far smarter than the typical plastic key; the patent describes ways a user could authorize a second phone over email to act as a key, but limit the car's top speed, or even the hours at which it would turn on.
Another Apple patent uncovered at the same time by AppleInsider revealed a related system that would help iPhone owners find their car in a parking garage using a combination of GPS, WiFi and Bluetooth — but would depend on parking decks outfitted with sensors to work.
Both suggest Apple has a growing appetite for making its devices a central part of owning a car. Another Apple site, 9to5Mac, said today that the next version of the company's iOS mobile system software may be designed to handle more in-car navigation and services, with automotive upgrades to Maps and Siri. Several automakers have said they would integrate Siri's services into their vehicles, but those efforts have been slow to deploy — thanks again to the long lead time automakers need to change software and hardware.
Apple's interest in getting behind the wheel may stem from increasing safety concerns about drivers using devices on the road. Last week, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration released voluntary guidelines for automakers on how they should design in-car entertainment and information displays — but there's no federal agency that has a clear role for cellphones used by drivers, leaving 10 states to bar any hand-held cellphone use while driving. Such laws would be harder to pass if you can't even start the car without your iPhone.

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I am a 25-year hospitality professional turned real estate broker and investor. Originally from Louisville, Kentucky, I have been blessed to live in some amazing places during the course of my career. Key Largo, Florida and Sea Island, Georgia, Southern California, Upstate New York, and numerous locales throughout the Midwest are just a few of the places I have called home. I have made Wilmington my home since 2002 and turned a passion and love of real estate into my vocation. I have been an active real estate investor for eleven years. I have purchased, rehabbed and sold dozens of homes over the course of my real estate career. Over the past three and a half years, I have dedicated myself to the practice of general brokerage. I am a REALTOR with Keller Williams Realty and offer traditional sales and marketing for buyers and sellers. I also offer consulting services to other investors. I am a past Board Member of the Coastal Carolina Real Estate Investors association. Whether for retirement, professional relocation, lifestyle changes, or investment, I have the local knowledge and aptness to help you achieve your real estate goals.
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