Soon, your smartphone can be your car keys

mojo

Adept
Keep misplacing your car keys? Just wave your smartphone to unlock the door!
Engineers at South Korean automobile major Hyundai have invented a new system that will allow your smartphone to double as your car keys, and the technology will be made available to buyers within two years.

Rather than using Bluetooth, the system by Hyundai uses wireless Near Field Communication (NFC), allowing you to lock and unlock the car by waving your phone over a small tag on the car window.

Inside the car, you place the phone on a pad in the centre console that wirelessly charges it while the content is synced and streamed to the car's infotainment system and touchscreen.
The system can also store in-car preferences, including radio stations, seating positions and even mirror adjustment - with multiple profiles able to be saved for different drivers.The system was demonstrated on a concept version of Hyundai's popular i30 in Germany.Hyundai said developing the system was part of the carmaker's aim of producing technology for the mainstream consumer, website carsguide.Com.Au reported.
"The Connectivity Concept showcases Hyundai's philosophy of making tomorrow's technology accessible to a wide range of customers," Hyundai Motor Europe chief operating officer Allan Rushforth said.
"With this technology, Hyundai is able to harness the all-in-one functionality of existing smartphone technology and integrating it into everyday driving in a seamless fashion," Rushforth said.

Source: http://business-standard.com/india/...our-smartphone-can-be-your-car-keys/200474/on
 
The biggest challenge would the be secuirty for the vehicle against thefts. There has been a protocol since many years for the automobiles. its called CAN(control area network) there was one lecture in which the professor was saying that a car with CAN was hacked by just opening the rear view mirror and connecting a logic analyzer.

again, NFC these days is just a chip with 1024bytes of readonly memory. so I guess they have to make it pretty robust against hacks.
 
With most cars going with keyless entry and push button starts, I'm surprised no one has implemented it yet.
 
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