Automotive highlights from CES 2020 Las Vegas
Connected vehicles and collaborative driving to increase road safety were hot topics at CES 2020.
The Ericsson team has just returned from a whirlwind of exciting discussions from CES 2020 Las Vegas, the world´s largest technology event. Key highlights were the insights and trends from the automotive industry and connected vehicles. Cellular communication plays an essential role for cars to be connected and share information with each other, so-called collaborative driving. Collaborative driving is key to increase safety on the roads and reduce fatalities in traffic. 5G, with available, reliable and secure capabilities, will further safeguard cellular relevance to support automotive needs.
One of my main reflections when talking to partners and colleagues in the automotive industry is the immediate need to deploy global Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) features to increase safety. We need to share and collaborate to save lives now. This means that the deployment models and execution for ADAS system features are currently being defined. Defined in vehicle devices but also in the network communication, edge and the cloud layers of “the stack”. Network Near services such as predictive availability, interworking, quality of service and security are enabled when using Ericsson Connected Vehicle Cloud (CVC). This enables trust in connectivity and then 5G. Trusted connectivity is used as an extra sensor to increase safety with driver assistance features.
In Las Vegas, we also described the partnership with Microsoft to combine Ericsson’s connected car platform, Connected Vehicle Cloud, on top of the Microsoft Connected Vehicle Platform running on the Microsoft Azure cloud platform. The integrated solution allows automakers to deploy and scale global vehicle services such as fleet management, over-the-air software updates and connected safety services much easier and faster while reducing costs. It provides flexibility through modular design and multiple deployment options.
Ericsson also joined our automotive industry partner Veoneer who uses Ericsson Connected Vehicle Cloud to connect ADAS products. It was very popular to get behind the wheel at Veoneer’s test track to experience firsthand the future of driving with connected vehicles. The test track was supplied with a Verizon 5G network powered by Ericsson technology.
There was a great interest in collaborative driving and how sensor data is shared from cameras, thermal sensing, radars delivered on 5G networks.
Font: Ericsson