Car Review: Ford Fiesta Takes Sync to the Next Level

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Ford’s on a roll. The subcompact 2011 Ford Fiesta is a treat to drive. It gets 40 mpg on the highway. And it kicks off an enhanced version of Ford Sync that gives you more neat and free features including turn-by-turn navigation – rudimentary but still free.

Ford faces three related challenges: Convincing Americans to pay a premium ($14,000 base, approaching $20,000 nicely equipped) for a subcompact car; convincing Americans a Ford-branded car is as good as a Honda or Toyota; and convincing us this Fiesta is better than its namesakes of the 1980s-1990s.

Ford’s Sync AppLink bringing in-car voice control to Android, BlackBerry apps

Look, there’s a better-than-average chance you’re buying a 2011 Ford Fiesta simply because it’s the rebirth of the Fiesta, but if you need a little encouragement, look no further. The aforesaid automaker has just confirmed that Sync AppLink will be coming first to next year’s Fiesta, enabling drivers to access and control select Android and BlackBerry apps via in-car voice commands and control buttons. At least initially, Pandora, Stitcher and OpenBeak will be AppLink-capable, but we’re pretty sure other app makers will be adding updates as the bandwagon swells. In fact, Ford’s going to be encouraging such behavior with the creation of the Mobile Application Developer Network, and if all goes well, AppLink will be installed in every single 2011 Ford model with Sync built-in. Of course, only time will tell if our demands for an INXS Pandora playlist leads to one capped off by Baja Men, but hey, at least the concept is sound.

Continue reading Ford’s Sync AppLink bringing in-car voice control to Android, BlackBerry apps

Ford’s Sync AppLink bringing in-car voice control to Android, BlackBerry apps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Apr 2010 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ford Eco-Route plots most fuel efficient path, tells you how much longer it’ll take

Ford’s been slowly but surely tweaking its MyFord Touch interface for months now, and the latest stroke of genius to come across will surely light up the faces of treehuggers. In an effort to provide more routing options to drivers, the automaker is showcasing its new Eco-Route function in the 2011 Edge, which may or may not cause velitation with the good folks over at Garmin’s similarly titled ecoRoute project. At any rate, the new addition allows motorists to choose between the fastest route, shortest (distance) route or most fuel efficient route, and it places the estimated time of travel for each within eyesight. We’re guessing that most of you would simply select the method that requires the smallest investment of time, but those with nothing but may enjoy the new option. And somehow, somewhere, Mother Earth is blowing you a carbon-free kiss. Check out a brief demonstration video after the break.

Continue reading Ford Eco-Route plots most fuel efficient path, tells you how much longer it’ll take

Ford Eco-Route plots most fuel efficient path, tells you how much longer it’ll take originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Apr 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Teams with Ford to Monitor, Charge Electric Cars

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When Ford’s first all-electric car, the Ford Focus Electric, ships in 2011, the recharging system will be remotely managed by Microsoft. What sounds like an odd-couple fit – Microsoft? manage off-hours home electrical usage? – actually makes sense because of Microsoft Hohm, a year-old Internet service helping consumers monitor all kinds of home energy usage. In the case of electric cars, time-shifting the recharge to late at night is important because recharging effectively a home’s daytime energy usage.

Ford bringing Microsoft Hohm energy management to Focus Electric next year

It won’t be among the first devices to use Microsoft’s cleverly-named Hohm energy management system, but Ford has just announced that it will be incorporating the technology into its upcoming Focus Electric car. That makes it the first automaker to hop on board, and Ford even goes so far as to call the move a “needed step in the development of the infrastructure that will make electric vehicles viable.” As with other devices, the internet-based Hohm service promises to help car owners determine when and how to most efficiently recharge their vehicles, and help utility companies manage demand as a result — if enough folks use it, that is. Ford hasn’t yet announced any other vehicles that will use Hohm, but the Focus Electric is apparently just the first of more to come, and will be available sometime next year. Head on past the break to see Microsoft explain the partnership.

Continue reading Ford bringing Microsoft Hohm energy management to Focus Electric next year

Ford bringing Microsoft Hohm energy management to Focus Electric next year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Mar 2010 13:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ford Proactively Improves the Ford Sync Firewall

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Locking the barn before not after the horse has left, Ford says it’s adding more data security to its Sync platform that brings Bluetooth and music connections to Ford, Lincoln, and Mercury vehicles. Ford said security hasn’t been a problem but with 2011 vehicles able to browse the Web – via a cellphone or smartphone, while the car is parked – Ford’s Sync guru declared it would be “just prudent” to add more security. Even if hacks haven’t happened yet, people freak out at the idea that somehow a hacker could mess with the car’s security or safety systems and next thing you know, there’d be Fords crashing left and right like they were Toyotas.

Ford Adds HOV Routing to Sync

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Ford is unveiling a new voice-activated version of Sync that will let customers take advantage of High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes when applicable. The system will come with select 2011 Ford, Lincoln, and Mercury vehicles, and will feature HOV lane guidance for over 2,500 miles of carpool routes in various congested metropolitan areas throughout North America.
The new 2011 Sync navigation system, powered by TeleNav (the same good folks behind AT&T Navigator and Sprint Navigator), also features HD Radio support, plus a SIRIUS Travel Link portfolio with traffic reports, incident alerts, and route suggestions to get around trouble areas. In addition, 2011 Sync includes improved street data displays with branded POI information, and shows more street names at each zoom level than before.
Later this year, Ford Sync will also integrate with a new Sync Traffic, Directions, and Information app for downloading destinations from a home or work computer via Mapquest. The 2011 Mustang will be the first car to receive the new Sync setup.

Ford adding HOV logic, ability to download outside Mapquest destinations to 2011 NAV systems

Ford’s been keeping itself busy on the navigation front, and while you may have noticed that 2010 just began a few weeks ago (on the Gregorian calendar, anyway), 2011 model year vehicles are already on the minds of those in Dearborn. 2011 models with voice-activated navigation systems will be getting an update that brings along HOV logic, helping users who travel with a buddy to get from point A to point B more hastily if carpool lanes are nearby. Of course, only 2,500 miles of those blanket America, so a few other updates might be intriguing to those of you who are sane enough to live outside of the rat race. Branded POI icons, higher density street labeling and HD Radio will come standard on voice-controlled NAV systems, and potentially most interesting is the notion that “integration with SYNC Traffic, Directions and Information (TDI) app — enabling new features like the ability to download destinations sent from a home or work computer from Mapquest” — will hit later on in the year. Full release is after the break.

Continue reading Ford adding HOV logic, ability to download outside Mapquest destinations to 2011 NAV systems

Ford adding HOV logic, ability to download outside Mapquest destinations to 2011 NAV systems originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 00:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Next-gen dashboards get Tegra 2, Moblin, Atom, we go hands-on

Intel Atom processors, capacitive touchscreens, NVIDIA Tegra 2 graphics, Moblin installs… sounds like a suite of hot next-gen ultra-portables, right? Think again. Those are just some of the technologies used in the dashboards of cars that will be appearing on showrooms in the coming months and years, dashes that were largely on display at CES — minus the cars themselves, usually. There we were treated to mobile glimpses of Google Earth, Pandora, and Slacker Radio on the go, plus the ability to lock and unlock your car via Ye Olde Internets. It’s the future, and it’s coming soon, so click on through already and get a sneak peek.

Continue reading Next-gen dashboards get Tegra 2, Moblin, Atom, we go hands-on

Next-gen dashboards get Tegra 2, Moblin, Atom, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 12:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MyFord Touch coming to 2011 Ford Focus

The 2010 Detroit Auto Show has just kicked off and Ford’s plans for the 2011 Focus have been made official. While others might care more about the 155bhp or new six-speed dual-clutch transmission, we’re best pleased by the inclusion of the MyFord touch control system. This setup was designed to drag the car dash into the modern touchscreen era, and our comprehensive hands-on revealed it to be a most impressive bit of tech. Two displays flank the analog speed gauge, but the pièce de résistance is an 8-inch, 800 x 480 optional screen landing in the center of the dash. Endued with a web browser, it’ll connect via 3G or 4G modems and concurrently act as a WiFi hotspot. Add in a bunch of forthcoming apps and compatibility with any Bluetooth device, and you’ve got a tech lover’s dream system. The next generation Focus should enter production near the end of 2010, giving us a full year to write a “vroom, vroom” app for our smartphones.

MyFord Touch coming to 2011 Ford Focus originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 04:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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