Streaming Radio… in your car?

We all knew it was coming… WiFi for your automobile. What was once considered to be something you may be able to get as an option on your next NEW car can now be added to your existing vehicle. I’ll let Roy Furchgott from the NY Times take it from here…

… Autonet quietly began to offer its hub — which has the same name as the company, Autonet Mobile — in Advance Auto Parts stores less than a month ago, and on Amazon.com last week. “Because people are holding onto their cars longer, they are looking for upgrades,” said Sterling Pratz, a co-founder of Autonet. “I believe that is a large opportunity for us.” Some boutique installers who sold them in their shops did offer them online before. This week other online retailers, like Crutchfield, will begin to sell the system.

The hubs are being used in several ways, Mr. Pratz said. About 38 percent of the buyers are businessmen and professionals who need an Internet connection at all times for work. About 33 percent are using the systems for backseat entertainment. Roughly 18 percent are technophiles using the system in the front seat to stream Internet radio and use location-based services like Fandango, which locates movie theaters and show times and sells tickets. And the remaining 11 percent of the buyers are fleet owners, including a small number of police and ambulance companies.The advantages to the Autonet hub as compared to using a mobile Internet card for a computer are chiefly twofold. First, the cards (and phones) are slow to locate and switch between towers, which is why there are sometimes dropped calls. Mr. Pratz said that his company had made software improvements that make the hand-offs smoother and more certain.

The second difference is durability. The shock, vibration and heat in a car “is very hard on electronics,” Mr. Pratz said, but his product is made to withstand that environment.

In the first three weeks of sales in Advance Auto Parts, more than 100 hubs had sold, and about 20 sold on the first day on Amazon, both without any promotion, Mr. Pratz said.

The hardware retails for $400, but a subscription is also required for the signal. Subscriptions are $30 or $60 a month depending on how much downloading the user wants to do.

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