Skip to main content

Intrepid Control Systems launches open platform OBD interface

Intrepid Control Systems says its NeoOBD2 Pro software development kit provides easy access for WiFi/BLE applications to available vehicle networks like CAN/CAN FD, LIN, and Ethernet. Developers can use the open platform OBD interface for automotive enterprise internet of things and wireless car applications, the company adds. The company’s NeoVI Ion, an expandable vehicle network adapter, logs vehicle data and transmits it via cellular or WiFi to the wireless neoVI server. Users can remotely download
October 1, 2018 Read time: 1 min

Intrepid Control Systems says its NeoOBD2 Pro software development kit provides easy access for WiFi/BLE applications to available vehicle networks like CAN/CAN FD, LIN, and Ethernet.

Developers can use the open platform OBD interface for automotive enterprise internet of things and wireless car applications, the company adds.

The company’s NeoVI Ion, an expandable vehicle network adapter, logs vehicle data and transmits it via cellular or WiFi to the wireless neoVI server. Users can remotely download, control and monitor data through an interface which matches individual data needs.

Intrepid supports networks and protocols including AUTOSAR, CAN, CAN FD, LIN, FlexRay, Automotive Ethernet, Keyword, UART, J1939, ISO 14229 and GMLAN.

Related Content

  • Michigan researchers show how easy it is to hack trucks
    August 5, 2016
    Cybersecurity researchers have already shown how easy it is to hack a Jeep Cherokee and take control of its brakes and steering, resulting in a recall for the vulnerability to be corrected. At the Usenix Workshop on Offensive Technologies conference next week, a group of University of Michigan researchers plan to demonstrate how trucks, which have also begun adding similar electronic control system, can be vulnerable to hacking. They plan to show how the openness of the SAE J1939 standard used across
  • Cubic & Samsung combine on Umo Platform reader
    March 15, 2024
    Umo Handheld Reader pairs Cubic software with Samsung’s off-the-shelf fare collection device
  • V2X: The design challenges
    May 2, 2018
    The connected future throws up a number of enticing possibilities for us all. But, says Houman Zarrinkoub of MathWorks, issues around visualisation, prototyping and model evolution need to be examined carefully. We are all aware of the huge amount of investment going into driverless car technologies. With the likes of Volvo, Tesla and BMW getting in on the act, soon they will be a common sight on our roads. However, for this to occur, the vehicles must be able to connect with each other and ensure driver
  • Init launches in-vehicle driver and vehicle monitoring
    December 9, 2014
    According to Init, its new Mobile-Eco2, a vehicle health and driver behaviour management system, improves the economy and ecology of public transit.