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In March of last year, we heard that Toyota had a mind to create its very own
in-car operating system to "boost efficiency and speed up development." Now,
it's bruited that BMW is asking any automaker who will listen to join hands in
order to jointly develop an open source in-vehicle platform. The company has
stated that it plans on having an open source system in a vehicle that sells
200,000 or more units within the next five to seven years, and while employees
from rivals were on hand when the proclamation was made, no one was rushing to
call dibs on first. Still, it sounds as if BMW will be forging ahead with or
without any assistance, though bigwig Gunter Reichart did assert that BMW was
"inviting other OEMs to join it [and] to exchange with it." In an apparent
attempt at providing comic relief, Jim Buczkowski (Ford's director of global
electrical and electronics systems engineering) stated that through its
partnership with Microsoft, it already had 280,000 vehicles on the road with an
open system. Hmm, clearly our definitions of "open" are somewhat incongruent.
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