Ford and University of Michigan team up to develop new apps for the SYNC system
The University of Michigan College of
Engineering and Ford are partnering up to work on the SYNC system
being implemented into upcoming vehicles.
The "American
Journey 2.0" project will have support from 25 to 30 UM students
who enroll in a winter 2010 course designed to develop apps for
SYNC.
SYNC has proven
extremely popular among car owners, as SYNC-enabled vehicles sell
twice as fast as Fords that don't have the technology.
The
SYNC
system currently offers drivers MP3 support, data-over-voice,
GPS, and text-to-speech features. UM-created apps could range
from driver habit observations to social networking apps.
Teams
of students in the UM class will be given the opportunity to develop
the apps they're interested in -- and they'll be judged by UM
professors and Ford officials. The most popular app will then
be used in a new Ford Fiesta model, UM and Ford said.
The
partnership is a win-win for both Ford and UM: Ford receives
innovative support from future software developers, while the UM
students get real-world knowledge -- and the ability to have their
apps utilized in future SYNC vehicles.
"We're going
to hand them this platform and say, 'build us something really
impressive,'" UM associate professor Brian Noble said in an
interview with Crain's Detroit. "This project has a high
reality quotient, we're connecting our students to a real
industrial problem and that's exciting."
The
Microsoft-powered SYNC system has gained popularity since its launch,
as car owners look to use a single in-car entertainment and
navigation system while driving.
"So, I think the same thing of the music industry. They can't say that they're losing money, you know what I'm saying. They just probably don't have the same surplus that they had." -- Wu-Tang Clan founder RZA
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