Monday, August 12, 2002 |
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Feature |
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Confide in the car
Can't
find a restaurant? Running out of gas? Down to your last dollar?
Tell it to the car.
International Business
Machines Corp. said it signed a deal with Honda Motor Corp. that will
make it easier for drivers to find the closest gas station or restaurant
by asking the car's computer for help.
IBM said Honda would offer
in its 2003 Accord models, for sale in September, a navigation system
that is integrated with voice recognition software and a small touch
screen.
The voice recognition
system works by touching a button on the steering wheel and then
speaking aloud. The software then responds, using the car's audio system
to give driving directions.
The voice recognition
software, based on IBM's ViaVoice product, understands different speech
accents and has a larger vocabulary, according to IBM director of
automotive and telematics solutions Raj Desai.
"It's closer to the
natural ability to have a dialogue, rather than just remembering key
words, which is what the previous generation systems had," Desai
said.
Companies including
DaimlerChrysler AG have been building cars with voice recognition and
other wireless communications-based services for years but it was still
not clear if there is a market for the technology, called telematics.
Ford Motor Corp., for
instance, pulled the plug on its 18-month-old telematics venture
Wingcast in June.
General Motors Corp. has
the largest telecommunications service system, called OnStar.
IBM said price information
on the system was not available. —Reuters
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