Wednesday, January 11, 2012

The Open Source Car

I have long held a notion that the concept of an open-source car would be one that would be very appealing to a wide and varied audience. It's blue sky thinking of the highest order for a variety of reasons (mostly legal!) but a concept I would love to see taken forward by some brave manufacturer. However, with the recent economic gloom having hit the automobile industry particularly hard, I doubt it will be any time soon.


My dream is simple in theory - I would love to have a car where the car's systems could be monitored, adjusted and modified easily. My dream would be to have the ECU, engine management system, performance levels, fuel economy, power ratio, acceleration curve etc. become 'tweakable' via some form of mobile or desktop app or wi-fi link to your pc. The capacity to do this clearly exists already where many recently released cars have a variety of settings that can be adjusted by the driver to counter various situations.

For example, the much heralded Bugatti Veyron can be adjusted for 'top speed mode' by using the ignition key to unlock a lower ride height, less spoiler assistance etc. The Honda CR-Z has three driving modes selectable via a button on the dashboard including Normal, Econ and Sport allowing you to tailor your power usage and economy to the road conditions or your mood allowing you to extend the vehicle's range or oomph at the press of a steering wheel mounted button. The beautiful Nissan GT-R has a computerised dashboard designed by Polyphony Digital of Gran Turismo video game fame that looks like something out of the Space Shuttle and can download telemetry data to a usb key for later analysis.

I realise that this dream could remain that way, especially with the legal implications of allowing the lay person the capacity to tinker with their car. Insurers would have heart attacks over the implications of this capacity being built in to a car but it would be cool to see people able to enhance and modify their cars the same way they tweak and mod their desktops and mobile phones. You could imagine people sharing their own 'car profiles' for other users to download and try out on their own car to see if they like the way it makes their car 'feel'.

A tantalising glimpse of this integrated future and people's interest in adding these features to their cars is already a reality with many people using ODBII Bluetooth sensors to analyse their car's engine codes for relatively little money. The popular Bluefin remapping device allows drivers to add power to their car's engine and can add better fuel economy. Even the modern smartphone is in on the act with excellent apps such as the Torque apps from Ian Hawkins and heads-up display apps such as Speedometer. The ability to better integrate our modern phones with our cars would go some way to addressing my dream.

However, the light at the end of this tunnel is Ford Sync. Ford are clearly market leaders on the tweakable car computer system with their excellent Sync software affording a variety of innovative controls to the humble driver. The system links with your mobile to offer standard hands-free calling etc. but can also read sms messages, send replies, control the vehicle's performance, link with your favourite apps - it's a very clever system and hopefully it will spur other manufacturers to do likewise. The ultimate hope would be that many will use Android/Linux as its base OS enabling us happy hackers to finally enjoy some in-car tweaking.


Tuesday, January 10, 2012

CES delights unveiled...beginning with JVC

With CES, the world's biggest consumer electronics show now underway, perhaps the most intriguing early announcement has been the new range of Everio camcorders from JVC.

These devices offer the usual HD goodness now standard in handhelds but also now feature Wi-Fi enabling the device to send out video clips directly and easier transfer of files. An app is also coming for the iPhone and Android devices that will enable sending out files via the phone and the ability to use it as a remote control for the camcorder. The phone app also enables GPS geotagging of videos and photos and live monitoring on the mobile.

This is a very cool development and surely heralds the future of connected photographic devices able to upload and share photos independently of a pc or mac.

Friday, January 06, 2012

Film of The Year 2011


Another year of movie goodness has been and gone and there have been some crackers this year. Once again I shall pick my personal favourite from those I have seen and have two clear favourites.


My choice for film of the year of 2011 was a surprise to me as it was a film that I felt did not appeal to me and I had originally had no intention in seeing but its entertaining plot, always-good-value leading man, a top notch villain, terrific humour, a very attractive and ballsy leading lady and touch of WWII conspiracy/steampunk flavouring saw Captain America run away with the honours. I loved it and the terrific visuals and hefty audio just added to the appeal. Roll on The Avengers in 2012!


The runner-up on this occasion was another film that I thought might be too dry for me but turned out to be a very entertaining watch. Inside Job is a terrific documentary that explains what and who was behind the recent financial collapse and credit crunch and shines a light on the shadowy world of the high-flying executives taking big gambles with ordinary people's money. It will get your blood boiling! One little aside is the two people who had the foresight to see what was happening to the global economy and tried hard to stop the carnage during the course of the film were two people who recently were publicly clobbered by forces unknown - Eliot Spitzer and Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Conspiracy theorists might say there was a reason for this.....


Previous winners:

2011 - Captain America (runner-up - Inside Job)

2010 - Knight and Day (runner up - Inception)

2009 - Star Trek

2008 - Vantage Point (runner up - Eagle Eye)

2007 - Shooter and Bourne Ultimatum

2006 - Deja Vu (runner up - V for Vendetta)

2005 - Transporter 2 (runner up - Stealth)

2004 - Bourne Supremacy (runner up - Man on Fire)

2003 - The Italian Job

2002 - Bourne Identity

2001 - Spy Game

2000 - Mission Impossible 2