Saab To Power In-Car Infotainment With Google's Android (Video)

Looks like Saab is coming back; and now they are joining the rest of the automakers in bringing in-car infotainment to the driver’s cockpit. Saab’s infotainment system, dubbed IQon, will run on Google’s Android — one of the first carmakers to do so.

Saab hopes to offer their customers a range of applications for IQon, including online services, that can be purchased from Saab’s IQon store. Also, Saab plans to offer and API for third-party developers, allowing them to access over 500 signals from different sensors in the car. This could be really neat.

Saab’s Head of Saab Aftersales and commercial project leader for IQon, Johan Formgren, had this to say about IQon:

With Saab IQon, there are no limits to the potential for innovation. We will be inviting the global Android developer community to use their imagination and ingenuity.

Today´s customers want to be as well connected inside the car as they are at all other times. IQon will give them the convenient, seamless connectivity they enjoy with smartphones, while adding new car-specific programs and services. IQon provides an embedded computer platform in the car with a modem which automatically connects to the internet when the car´s ignition is switched on. An 8-inch touchscreen provides access to services, including audio and entertainment streaming, online navigation and on-board music storage.

Our open innovation strategy, using the Android operating system, will keep the provision of in-car infotainment up to date. IQon will allow infotainment services to constantly evolve during the lifetime of a car´s product cycle,  unlike current in-car systems which are fixed some years before a car goes on sale and then remain static.

Now, I know what you’re thinking. There are going to be some really neat apps out there. Some could even be too dangerous for use when driving. Saab says that all apps must first be approved before entering the IQon store. But, I’m sure it won’t be long before someone roots it.

Press Release

World First from Saab: Saab IQon – Open Innovation in Car Infotainment

Saab Automobile is changing the auto industry infotainment landscape by engaging external partners in ‘open innovation´ for the development of its new IQon infotainment concept, using Google´s Android operating system.Saab IQon delivers a completely new car infotainment user experience, combining all that´s best from the mobile industry with Saab´s automotive knowledge and innovative spirit to create an infotainment system for the next generation of Saab cars. 

Users will be able to download a wide range of applications, online services and multi-media functions provided through a Saab IQon store. Saab will issue third-party developers with a vehicle application programming interface (API) providing access to more than 500 signals from different sensors in the vehicle. These measure, for example, vehicle speed, location and direction of travel, driver workload, yaw rate, steering wheel angle, engine speed and torque, inside and outside temperature, barometric pressure and the sun´s position.

“With Saab IQon, there are no limits to the potential for innovation,” says Johan Formgren, Head of Saab Aftersales and commercial project leader for IQon. “We will be inviting the global Android developer community to use their imagination and ingenuity.”

Saab´s collegiate development strategy – open innovation – is a ´first´ in the automotive industry and provides a faster, more efficient and more flexible alternative to the conventional, in-house development of vehicle infotainment services.

“Today´s customers want to be as well connected inside the car as they are at all other times,” adds Formgren. “IQon will give them the convenient, seamless connectivity they enjoy with smartphones, while adding new car-specific programs and services. IQon provides an embedded computer platform in the car with a modem which automatically connects to the internet when the car´s ignition is switched on. An 8-inch touchscreen provides access to services, including audio and entertainment streaming, online navigation and on-board music storage.”

Saab´s ‘open innovation´ strategy offers the global developer community access to the full bandwidth of car communications — infotainment, telematics, systems monitoring and diagnostics. In this way, it opens up new dimensions in customer choice for the personalization of in-car services. Even applications specific to particular countries can be included.

“Our open innovation strategy, using the Android operating system, will keep the provision of in-car infotainment up to date,” adds Formgren. “IQon will allow infotainment services to constantly evolve during the lifetime of a car´s product cycle,  unlike current in-car systems which are fixed some years before a car goes on sale and then remain static,.”

To ensure high driving safety and quality standards are maintained, programs from software developers and application providers will be evaluated and approved by Saab before they are made available to customers through the online Saab IQon store.

IQon also provides a platform for remote communication to and from the car with Saab dealerships, for example, using telemetry to upload vehicle data, carry out diagnostics, provide service appointments or even install some in-car options.

The IQon system is shown for the first time in the Saab PhoeniX concept car at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show. A beta version of the IQon system is already being trialed with company users in a fleet of test cars.