'Hey Mercedes' - Daimler takes on Silicon Valley with hi-tech A-Class

Reuters  |  AMSTERDAM 

By Laurence Frost

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Daimler's new Mercedes A-Class, unveiled on Friday, includes the German automaker's own machine-learning and technology in one of the industry's boldest attempts so far to take on Silicon Valley's finest.

The Mercedes "MBUX" dashboard system to be rolled out across the lineup is about as capable at understanding what you say - and more importantly what you mean - as Amazon's Alexa, Apple's Siri or Alphabet's

Its debut comes as carmakers are embroiled in a tech arms race, raising questions about the ultimate profitability of new services that often duplicate those available on itself warned on Thursday that 2018 profit growth would be dampened by

Carmakers, especially premium manufacturers, are resisting the encroachment of tech giants on several fronts including autonomous driving and connected services - whose commercial potential multiplies with and assistance.

"It's fine to have or voice apps sitting alongside the main one, but no company wants the voice activation that controls the air con to be Alexa," said Mike Ramsey, a Detroit-based with tech research firm Gartner.

The system "narrows the gap with tech," Ramsey said. "If it works as advertised, Mercedes will have set a new standard and given hope to other automakers that they can build a voice interface that actually works like Siri or "

Mercedes is updating its A-Class with a new look and engines, roomier interior and semi-autonomous driving features that can help pilot the in highway traffic.

But its biggest draw is the MBUX system, presented on two large horizontal touch-screens that dispense entirely with dashboard instruments.

It uses to make sense of commands and even anticipate them by learning the preferences and habits of up to eight different users. Spoken instructions can command everything from navigation to infotainment.

Other auto brands have taken a more affordable approach, often using "mirroring", which grants access to apps via a touch-screen interface. Some also route vocal commands straight to Siri, Alexa or

'NO CHOICE'

hopes customers already used to voice assistants won't miss Siri or Alexa when they climb aboard and must remember to preface requests with "hey Mercedes" instead.

The A-Class could be a test of whether carmakers can make bespoke voice assistants a selling point that customers are prepared to pay more for.

rebuffed that idea.

"We've tested it already," he told reporters at the Amsterdam launch. "We don't test on our customers."

Unlike its cloud-based rivals, available only when online, the Mercedes uses embedded software from Nuance Communications, a Massachussets-based specialist, to continue functioning when data connections fail.

Mercedes declined to say whether the current A-Class starting price of 24,000 euros ($30,000) would rise with the new model.

But its profitability will, Zetsche insisted - citing axles among mechanical components where savings had been found to offset higher tech spending.

Carmakers now have "no choice" but to put their best technology into their smallest cars, said. "Otherwise those cars would be uncompetitive."

"Everyone's using for navigation on their because are so outdated," he said. "These things need to change."

The are pushing harder for dashboard space. Apple's CarPlay mirroring service includes Siri and is now available on more than 200 vehicle models, while a three-year effort by has placed Alexa in and cars.

Suppliers are also jostling. At the CES tech show in Las Vegas, showcased an upgraded infotainment system based on software, allowing drivers to use voice commands to pull up directions or access some vehicle controls.

The growing interest among suppliers, and Nuance's embedded software technology, may open the way for other carmakers to follow Daimler's lead, Gartner's Ramsey predicts.

"Really slick integration of is the big tech thing we're going to see in cars over the next couple of years," he said.

($1 = 0.8008 euros)

(Reporting by Laurence Frost; Additional reporting by Paresh Dave in San Francisco, Edward Taylor in Frankfurt and Paul Lienert in Detroit; Editing by Mark Potter)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, February 03 2018. 04:49 IST