The Connected Car: Ford Introduces MyFord Touch

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The Connected Car: Ford Introduces MyFord Touch
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Last month, we talked about two features of the MyFord Touch system: the ability to make your car into Wi-Fi hotspot and HD radio with iTunes tagging support.

The new interface has been designed to replicate a traditional car dashboard, but everything is interconnected. There are two 4.2" LCD screens on either side of an analog speedometer, plus an 8" touch-screen LCD in the center console. Controls on either side of the steering wheel make it easy to navigate different options.

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More Features

Here are some other features that MyFord Touch, powered by SYNC, will include:

Media Hub

Additional USB port for a total of two USB 2.0 inputs

SD Card slot

RCA A/V input jacks

Internet Connectivity

Full Wi-Fi capability including Internet "hot spot" connectivity and a built-in browser for use while in "Park" (late availability)

Integrated browser supports tabbed page navigation, "drag" to pan and scroll and a provides a 3-D carousel for bookmark browsing

Support for on-screen and USB-connected keyboards

RSS feed aggregator and text-to-voice reader

Mobile in-car Wi-Fi "hot spot" capability through USB-installed air card or USB mobile broadband modem

Audio

AM/FM/CD, SIRIUS/XM satellite radio, USB-connected MP3 players and memory sticks

New HD Radio capability

Song tagging capability via HD Radio Technology, allowing listeners to identify song information and store it for later use

Browse tracks by artist, scan lists of tracks with identical names, and browse through devices without having to change audio sources

-D carousel album cover art and photo viewing displays allow easy scanning of available material, especially combined with Gracenote Media Management

Media player equipped with new "Podcast" source category

Enhanced Bluetooth® audio support including metadata, which allows additional command and control functions for capable mobile devices

What's really cool is that Ford will be making built-in vehicle navigation a standard feature on MyFord SYNC vehicles. Navigation support is built into the main Windows-embedded powered console, and using an SD card, users can easily upgrade mapping and other data without having to rely on DVDs or hardware upgrades.

Stepping It Up a Notch

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When it comes to car connectivity options, Ford is really leading the market. Having the same system available to control your heat, your music and your navigation systems -- plus the ability to link to your phone and act as a Wi-Fi hotspot -- totally completes the idea of the connected car.

What impresses us about Ford's approach is that everything is designed to be upgradeable. You can use the SD card slot to install new updates or add-ons. You don't have to buy a new head-unit for in-dash navigation or HD radio, it's already there. I only wish my favorite German car companies would take note and follow suit.

The coolest technology is that which is least visible -- which is one reason the first SYNC systems were so successful. If Ford can accomplish that same feat with the MyFord Touch SYNC platform, it will have created a compelling feature that new car buyers are sure to notice.

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