Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Linux

Hyundai Joins the Linux Foundation To Embrace AGL's Open Source Connected Car Tech (venturebeat.com) 38

Hyundai has become the latest car company to explore serious open source alternatives for developing its in-car services. From a report: Ahead of CES 2019, the South Korean automotive giant today announced that it has joined the Linux Foundation and the nonprofit's seven-year-old Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) effort as it looks to contribute to -- and reap benefit from -- software developed by over 140 companies. For Hyundai, open collaboration is crucial as it pursues a "connected car vision," Paul Choo, VP and head of Infotainment Technology Center at Hyundai, said in a statement. Car companies have traditionally taken three years or longer to develop in-vehicle services, such as infotainment systems. The bottleneck usually lies in the quality of code their in-house programmers create. According to a case study published by AGL, a connected car uses some 100 million lines of code, which is about 11 times more than the number that went into the F-35 fighter jet. Getting on AGL's bandwagon would also help Hyundai speed up development of its in-car technologies.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Hyundai Joins the Linux Foundation To Embrace AGL's Open Source Connected Car Tech

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    For paying developers working on large projects, also for paying standards bodies for developing IPC or protocols that the developers both supplant and work with.

  • Man pages (Score:5, Funny)

    by sinij ( 911942 ) on Friday January 04, 2019 @11:56AM (#57904922)
    I am curious what man page on changing a tire would look like and if there a chance it will have less than a dozen of listed args.
    • The tech manual will be automatically installed on your smartphone when you buy or rent the car.

  • officially start the Year Of Linux :)

  • Car manufacturers are (understandably) hyper paranoid about software faults in their vehicles. They even have a lintable subset of C called MISRA-C which is designed to identify and eliminate some of the problems commonly associated with the language - memory leaks, dangling pointers etc.

    Modern cars are increasingly complex things with many subsystems, network connectivity, over the air updates, telematics, driver assistance, HUDs, entertainment systems, message buses etc. Not only must they worry about s

  • The bottleneck usually lies in the quality of code their in-house programmers create.

    I'm shocked, shocked! to hear this.

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

Working...