Daimler teams up with China's Baidu in connected cars drive


  • TECH
  • Tuesday, 26 May 2015

ALLIANCE: The Mercedes-Benz cars will include Baidu software to access content from smartphones via their dashboards.

German carmaker Daimler is to make software from web services company Baidu available in its Chinese Mercedes-Benz cars as part of a trend of deepening ties between carmakers and consumer technology companies.

Carmakers are seeking to extend information and entertainment services available in vehicles, as well as smartphone compatibility, in an era of increasingly congested traffic.

Daimler and Chinese tech giant Baidu announced their tie-up at consumer electronics show CES in Shanghai.

The Mercedes-Benz cars will include Baidu software that allows users to access content from their smartphones via their dashboards, such as music and Internet services.

The companies did not say when the first cars including the Baidu application would be produced.

The deal comes as the battle to buy Nokia's maps business, which is regarded as an important asset to develop self-driving cars, is heating up.

It has become a three-way race between German carmakers Daimler, BMW and Volkswagen's Audi on the one hand, competing with a consortium including Uber and Baidu, and a third group including China's Tencent and Navinfo, people familiar with the process have told Reuters.

Separately, Daimler said it would explore wireless recharging of mobile phones in cars as well as the recharging of electric cars without cables, in partnership with chipmaker Qualcomm. — Reuters

Win a prize this Mother's Day by subscribing to our annual plan now! T&C applies.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

TeamViewer 'more than confident' in its 2024 forecast
Using AI for weight loss isn’t a bad thing, personal trainers say
Apple working on AI chips for data centers, WSJ reports
Cops: Easy access to social media, pornography causing social problems among children
Opinion: All I want is advice, not a video
Sony backtracks faced with anger of ‘Helldivers 2’ players
Amazon to spend nearly $9 billion to expand cloud infra in Singapore
Banning phones at school could help girls succeed
Passkeys could make passwords a thing of the past
Australia seeks client data from crypto exchanges in tax crackdown

Others Also Read