Skip to main content

NavFusion provides map updates via a smart phone app

A new app that connects a vehicle’s systems to the internet opens up a range of possibilities as Jon Masters discovers. Sometimes the most straightforward or simple of ideas can be the most significant. So it seems with the latest development from Hungarian navigation software supplier NNG. The company’s software features in-vehicle infotainment systems and has launched NavFusion – which connects a vehicles’ sat nav programs to smartphones. NavFusion is being incorporated into NNG’s iGO navigation s
November 28, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
A new app that connects a vehicle’s systems to the internet opens up a range of possibilities as Jon Masters discovers.

Sometimes the most straightforward or simple of ideas can be the most significant. So it seems with the latest development from Hungarian navigation software supplier 7430 NNG. The company’s software features in-vehicle infotainment systems and has launched NavFusion – which connects a vehicles’ sat nav programs to smartphones.

NavFusion is being incorporated into NNG’s iGO navigation software to get it into vehicles’ infotainment systems from early next year. It will come with a smartphone app useable as a stand-alone navigation tool when outside of the car but the main aim is to give easy access to internet map updates through the smart phone.

At a stroke, NNG appears to have solved a significant problem for drivers and OEMs. The firm’s senior vice president for automotive sales is Jim Nardulli. He says: “A United States JD Power consumer survey has found that the number one complaint about vehicle infotainment systems is the difficulty experienced with updating navigation maps. It is usually both difficult and expensive to get map updates. We have arrived at a simple solution that will allow it to become cheaper and easier.”

The NavFusion app will be available for Android and iOS Smart- phones and can be made available for other formats, Nardulli says. Its introduction seems so simple, it begs the question, why has nobody done it before?

“A couple of things have come together to get us to this point,” Nardulli says. “We have seen a lot of companies trying to make a business out of connecting cars in various ways. Engineers have been tending to get too excited about what they can do, rather than thinking what they should do. They look to develop proprietary products that lock OEM’s and consumers in. NNG looks to create open technology that does not create a proprietary lock.

“People’s lives are increasingly digital and based around the smartphone and they spend a lot of time in their cars, particularly so in America. All of this struck us as we considered how people spend their days. Navigation systems have become a standard feature in the car and the maps increasingly need to be kept fresh. It’s possible to provide a free or low cost app for updates to the smartphone so why not combine the two and make a similar feature for the navigation of the infotainment system as well?”
NNG expects others to follow its lead while hoping its head start, and a significant market share of the factory fit navigation business, will propel NavFusion to the forefront. “There is no need to produce something proprietary here. The emphasis is on making this software simple, open and easy to understand. We measure success on the basis of how many people’s lives we impact,” Nardulli says.

Nonetheless, NavFusion has been two years in the making and NNG could have a head start of that magnitude on its competitors. It work with Tier-1 infotainment suppliers such as 6328 Harman, Clarion, Pioneer and FujitsuTen and according to Nardulli, it supplied 26% of the global automotive infotainment market in 2013, excluding China and Japan. “Our expectation is to be supplying 40% of the market available worldwide by 2014,” Nardulli says.

The industry’s response to NavFusion so far has been overwhelming, says Nardulli. “Vehicle manufacturers have absolutely jumped on this. They can see the simplicity of it and will control what information gets in and out of the vehicle,” he says.

The NavFusion car/smartphone connection could allow drivers to receive all manner of traffic, weather and news or event information to aid their route selection. It could also provide a very useful link to allow more cars to become data sources for traffic management and travel information.

“A number of possibilities can be foreseen, such as communication of VRM (vehicle relationship management) between the car and the dealership. Every device can benefit from being connected to the internet, but we are not dictating how that will unfold. We’re just enabling it to happen,” Nardulli says. “The OEMs will control what data can get in and out of the car and how it is managed for reasons of safety and security. Whatever OEMs want, we will advise how it can be done, but most importantly we will aim to keep vehicles connected and updated.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Copenhagen to showcase ITS in action at ITSWC 2018
    December 18, 2017
    As delegates head for the 2017 ITS World Congress in Montreal, we talk to Copenhagen mayor Morten Kabell about why his city is the ideal location for next year’s event. It may have been a long time coming but the ITS World Congress will be in Copenhagen in 2018 and there can be few more fitting places to host the event. By any number of metrics - interconnected transport, cycle commuting, safer streets, reduced pollution, sustainable energy and quality of life - the Danish capital has implemented what m
  • Hartford’s tailors winter maintenance on Esri’s GIS platform
    August 5, 2016
    The in-house winter maintenance and vehicle tracking system built by the Public Works Department in Hartford, Connecticut, coped with record snowfalls and cut costs too. When it comes to dealing with the effects of mother nature, transport agencies can find themselves in a lose-lose situation: criticised if the roads or rail lines are disrupted by snow, ice or floods for more than a few hours and lambasted for wasting money if the equipment and stockpiles put in place for a hard winter remain unused.
  • Machine vision standards definition moves forward with establishment of new forum
    December 3, 2012
    The new Future Standards Forum will homogenise standards develop in the machine vision and partnering sectors. Here, machine vision industry experts discuss developments. By Jason Barnes At the Vision Show, which took place in Stuttgart at the beginning of November, the European Machine Vision Association, the US’s Automated Imaging Association and the Japan Industrial Imaging Association (JIIA) established a joint initiative, the Future Standards Forum (FSF). This, said the EMVA’s President Toni Ventura, a
  • Turnkey projects deliver enforcement for developing countries
    January 25, 2012
    Jenoptik Robot’s Ralf Schmitz talks about enforcement deployments in developing countries, and how those with long-established histories still have much to learn. In the enforcement sector, the concept of technology provider also being responsible for operations is hardly a new one. Nevertheless, it has gained significant traction over the last five or six years and has the potential to radically change the complexion of the industry according to Jenoptik Robot’s Director, Sales Ralf Schmitz.