Skip to main content

BlackBerry and Amazon join Ivy league

Tech giants link up to develop intelligent vehicle data platform
By Adam Hill December 8, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
BlackBerry's Ivy solution 'addresses critical data problem' (© Ifeelstock | Dreamstime.com)

Amazon Web Services (AWS) and BlackBerry have signed a global deal to develop and market the latter's intelligent vehicle data platform, Ivy. 

The scalable, cloud-connected software platform allows carmakers to read vehicle sensor data - and to create actionable insights from it both in the car itself and the cloud.

BlackBerry says Ivy "addresses a critical data access, collection and management problem in the automotive industry".  

The company's point is that vehicles comprise thousands of components - many of which produce data - from different suppliers, and that each vehicle model has its own proprietary hardware and software. 

"The highly specific skills required to interact with this data, as well as the challenges of accessing it from within contained vehicle subsystems, limit developers’ abilities to innovate quickly and bring new solutions to market," the company continues in a statement.

BlackBerry says Ivy can support multiple vehicle operating systems and multi-cloud deployments "in order to ensure compatibility across vehicle models and brands".

Building upon BlackBerry's own, widely-used QNX technology, it will run inside a vehicle’s embedded systems, but will be managed and configured remotely from the cloud.

AWS’s capabilities for Internet of Things (IoT) and machine learning will be a key element.

For vehicle manufacturers, the system will make collaboration with various developers easier, BlackBerry suggests, and speed up the development of connected services across OEM brands.

The partners suggest Ivy could also help manufacturers to understand how drivers perform in hazardous road conditions and adjust driver assistance features accordingly.

“Data and connectivity are opening new avenues for innovation in the automotive industry," said BlackBerry CEO John Chen.

“This software platform promises to bring an era of invention to the in-vehicle experience and help create new applications, services, and opportunities without compromising safety, security or customer privacy."

AWS CEO Andy Jassy insists: “Through this joint effort with BlackBerry, we will provide automakers with the insights, capabilities, agility, and speed they need to thrive in an increasingly connected world."

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Group manages traffic via satellite connection 
    October 14, 2021
    Consortium testing included input from Excelerate, ESA and Satellite Applications Catapult
  • CerebrumX thinks hard about first responders
    October 26, 2022
    Data specialist partners with RTC on RoadMedic to reduce 911 response times
  • Owning a car will be a thing of the past in less than a decade, say researchers
    January 10, 2017
    UK automotive executives expect that more than half of today’s car owners will not want to own a car in less than a decade, according to KPMG’s Global Automotive Executive Survey 2017. The survey found that 74 per cent of UK automotive executives think that until 2025, more than half of car owners today will not want to own a vehicle, as self-driving technology and mobility as a service will take priority. The report findings revealed that 62 per cent of UK automotive executives view diesel technolog
  • Open Mobile Alliance to moderate panel at Telematics West Coast
    October 24, 2014
    The Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) is to moderate a panel at this year’s Telematics West Coast conference, 30 and 31 October at the Hilton San Diego. The panel titled ‘The car steps out into the connected world’ will be comprised of industry leaders and moderated by director Market Development, OMA, Dr Eshwar Pittampalli. The panel is set to cover the latest developments and predictions in the In-Vehicle-Infotainment (IVI) market and give visitors to the conference a detailed insight into whether the content