• Home
  • Contact Us!
  • Privacy Policy

Radio Metta

  • Home
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
  • Home Deco
  • News
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Contact Us!
  • Privacy Policy
Home» Technology»TomTom’s navigation technology is now part of Microsoft’s Connected Vehicle Platform

TomTom’s navigation technology is now part of Microsoft’s Connected Vehicle Platform

Loknath Das 07 Sep 2019 Technology Comments Off on TomTom’s navigation technology is now part of Microsoft’s Connected Vehicle Platform 841 Views

tomtommsftconnectedvehicle.jpg

Microsoft and TomTom have been enemies, and more recently, partners. On September 6, the two took another step along the partnership path, with TomTom announcing that its navigation technology has been integrated with Microsoft’s Connected Vehicle Platform.

Via this integration, “navigation usage and diagnostics data can be sent from vehicles to Microsoft Azure where the data can be used by automakers to generate data-driven insights to deliver tailored services and to make better informed design and engineering decisions,” according to TomTom’s press release. The location intelligence, which includes traffic information and HD map services, also can be used for navigation apps and autonomous driving, TomTom said.

Back in December 2016, TomTom announced its location-based services were available on Azure. In February 2019, TomTom was among the vendors Microsoft selected as location data providers for mapping services for Azure Maps, Bing, Cortana, Windows and unspecified “future offerings.”

Microsoft’s Connected Vehicle Platform (MCVP) — formerly known as its Connected Car Platform — is all about getting vehicles to connect to Microsoft cloud services like Azure, Office 365 and more on the back-end. Microsoft’s Connect Vehicle strategy replaced its old “Windows Automotive” plan, via which Microsoft attempted to convince car makers to embed Windows inside their vehicles.

MCVP is a platform layer on top of Azure. It gives car makers and integration partners a way to deliver vehicle sensor telemetry into a data lake running on Azure, according to a Microsoft white paper on MCVP. MCVP isn’t just about passenger vehicles; it also is intended to work with commercial and industrial vehicles, including cars, trucks, cranes, ships and drones.

“MCVP provides IoT for things that move,” the paper explains.

Unlike some of its competitors, Microsoft isn’t taking the approach (these days) of trying to build an autonomous driving system or in-vehicle entertainment system. It’s trying to attract car makers to use its cloud technology to build their own customized solutions. Microsoft is providing vehicle makers with a menu of cloud-connected options: IoT, AI, security, connectivity, productivity and edge services.

Microsoft’s pitch is it can deliver an “automotive grade, cloud-based data pipeline implementation for secure, hyperscale communication between vehicles and their end connected mobility services (such as telematics, diagnostics and remote vehicle
feature control).”

MCVP is one of a number of platforms that Microsoft is building on top of Azure for specific verticals. It also is targeting healthcare, energy, financial services, government, manufacturing and media and entertainment. In some of these verticals, Microsoft is providing blueprints with documentation, modeling, scripts and architectural guidance to help jumpstart the creation of custom solutions. Microsoft’s overarching mission is to move more businesses to Azure.

[“source=zdnet”]

(part connected Is Microsoft’s navigation Now of Platform technology TomTom's vehicle 2019-09-07
Tags (part connected Is Microsoft’s navigation Now of Platform technology TomTom's vehicle
Facebook Twitter Stumble linkedin Pinterest More

Authors

Posted by : Loknath Das
Previous Article :

Embassy Office Parks REIT shines amidst real estate troubles

Next Article :

Founder2be connects you with business’ best and brightest for under $50

Related Articles

Introducing WAXAL: Expanding the Future of African Speech Technology

Introducing WAXAL: Expanding the Future of African Speech Technology

admin 10 Feb 2026

Overcoming Common Obstacles in Data Modernization

admin 06 Feb 2026
6 Stages for Software Development Procedure You Need to Know

6 Stages for Software Development Procedure You Need to Know

admin 02 Feb 2026

Latest Post

Heart Failure Sounds Frightening — But What Does It Actually Mean?
Health

Heart Failure Sounds Frightening — But What Does It Actually Mean?

admin 17 Feb 2026
Lap Dye Test for Infertility: A Gentle, Minimally Invasive Way to Understand Your Fertility
Health

Lap Dye Test for Infertility: A Gentle, Minimally Invasive Way to Understand Your Fertility

admin 16 Feb 2026
Diabetes and Your Heart: How Blood Sugar Impacts Your Arteries
Health

Diabetes and Your Heart: How Blood Sugar Impacts Your Arteries

admin 13 Feb 2026
Rainwater Harvesting and Water Treatment: Essential Features for Modern Apartments
Real Estate

Rainwater Harvesting and Water Treatment: Essential Features for Modern Apartments

admin 12 Feb 2026
How EHR Systems Are Transforming Women’s Healthcare
Health

How EHR Systems Are Transforming Women’s Healthcare

admin 10 Feb 2026
Introducing WAXAL: Expanding the Future of African Speech Technology
Technology

Introducing WAXAL: Expanding the Future of African Speech Technology

admin 10 Feb 2026

Overcoming Common Obstacles in Data Modernization

admin 06 Feb 2026
February 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425262728  
« Jan    
  • Home
  • Contact Us!
  • Privacy Policy
Copyright 2016, All Rights Reserved
Magazine Blog News WordPress Theme