RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Add RCR Wireless as a preferred source on Google
  • Qualcomm 6G Insights
  • Huawei Content Hub
  • Qualcomm – 6G Vision
  • OSS/BSS Channel
RCR Wireless
RCR Wireless
  • Advanced Mimo
  • Mobile mmWave
  • 5G Positioning
  • Green Networks
  • Metaverse
  • Automotive
  • Industrial and Wide-area IoT
Copyright 2021 - All Right Reserved
Home - Analyst Angle: A geek product or a safety product?
Analyst AngleCarriersConnected CarsOpinionWireless

Analyst Angle: A geek product or a safety product?

by RCR Wireless News February 17, 2015
written by RCR Wireless News February 17, 2015 Share
LinkedinEmail
Share 0LinkedinEmail
connected car smart dsrc
108

AT&T, Verizon will give us the answer

One hot area for automotive technology these days is the “connected car,” a vehicle sold with a built-in cellular radio modem that connects its systems to cloud-based services and can also provide a wide range of safety, Internet and convenience features to the owner.

Some of the most obvious uses of connectivity are the classic OnStar safety features of 911 calls, airbag deployment alerts, GPS-based roadside assistance, remote unlocking and stolen car recovery. But along with these classic telematics features, we’re also seeing Internet-age features like streaming media, remote climate control, geofencing, “see where I am” apps, live traffic, live map data and satellite images and much more.

In the lists above, there are two broad, overlapping categories. One is safety and the other is mobile Internet. The question remains as to which of these categories speaks more directly to consumers’ needs and desires. Fortunately, a live market experiment is shaping up to show us the answer.

While connected car services are already known to be installed in new cars from multiple carmakers, notably General Motors and Audi, there are also aftermarket methods to link up any car built post-1996 using a little-known port under the dash. In January of this year, both Verizon Wireless and AT&T Mobility offered a new service for connecting as many as 100,000 U.S. cars that are already on the road using their standard on-board diagnostic ports, which are analogous to a USB plug into the car’s computers.

But the two carriers are going to market with completely different approaches. While AT&T Mobility is offering a highly flexible tech solution, in which third-party competitors can build on top of their technology and increase functionality, Verizon Wireless is launching a brain-dead simple product which appeals to the risk-averse consumer.

Key differences between the two:

Verizon Wireless’ offering:

  • Like a “connected AAA.”
  • The marketing avoids any geeky tech talk, focuses on safety.
  • Don’t mention or show the OBDII dongle, just see the Bluetooth Visor, which looks a lot like an OnStar control panel.
  • A smartphone is clearly described as an optional way of interacting, but not essential.
  • Verizon Wireless is selling it on the established consumer cellphone model of subsidized hardware with monthly payments.

AT&T Mobility’s offering:

  • AT&T is partnered with Mojio, which has an open platform for software developers.
  • Shows the OBD module is a smartphone-centric design, with functions and services delivered through the cloud and an app.

As much as I like the more technically open solution AT&T Mobility offers, I’m pretty sure the consumer market won’t understand it, and won’t respond to it. I see Verizon Wireless’ approach as tapping into a proven consumer desire for safety and security. While the advanced features AT&T Mobility’s open platform enable may be more exciting to geeks, that market is eager, but historically quite thin.

Which do you think will work better for the mass market? Verizon Wireless, AT&T Mobility, or neither. Let us know.

Liz Kerton is managing director of industry analyst firm Kerton Group, based in San Jose, Calif., and director of the Autotech Council. 

 

You Might Also Like
  • Why consolidation will reshape MDU connectivity (part 3/3) – Analyst Angle
  • Wednesday | Telco agents and smash hits (Editorial Diary)
  • Trust you can see – the convergence of voice, messaging, and identity (Reader Forum)
  • Tuesday | Vertical build-outs, horizontal break-ups (Editorial Diary)
  • Monday | Global enterprise reset (Editorial Diary)
  • Why consolidation will reshape MDU connectivity (part 2/3) – Analyst Angle
Share 0 LinkedinEmail
RCR Wireless News

previous post
Velocitel buys FDH to grow tower modification business
next post
Nokia Networks expands telco cloud portfolio

White Papers

  • Enea White Paper: Why Intelligent AAA is the Swiss Army Knife of Telecom

  • CSG White Paper: Telco AI Enabler: Mediation’s Defining Role

  • Enea White Paper: Scalable Database Design for 5G and Beyond

  • Supermicro and NVIDIA Whitepaper: Powering sovereign AI at scale

  • VIAVI Whitepaper: RAN scenario generators and their critical role for future-proofing AI-native RAN in Advanced 5G and 6G networks

Editorial Reports

  • Report: Scaling Optical Networks For The Hyperscale And AI Era

  • Test And Measurement Market Pulse Report

  • Editorial Report: Securing telecom infrastructure for the quantum era

Webinars

  • Webinar: Rethinking the RAN as AI, cloud and openness converge

  • Webinar: Scale-Up, Scale-Out, Scale-Across – Building AI-Era Network Fabrics

  • Webinar: NTN in motion – evolving standards, expanding services

  • Webinar: Noise-Figure Measurements with RFmx and PXI VSTs

  • Qualcomm Webinar – Building the 6G Standard: Key developments to know

Since 1982, RCR Wireless News has been providing wireless and mobile industry news, insights, and analysis to mobile and wireless industry professionals, decision makers, policy makers, analysts and investors.

Facebook Twitter Youtube Linkedin Envelope Rss

Useful Links

  • Subscribe
  • About RCR Wireless News
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Wireless News Archive
  • Subscribe
  • About RCR Wireless News
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Wireless News Archive

Edtior's Picks

Enea White Paper: Why Intelligent AAA is the Swiss Army Knife of Telecom
Huawei outlines AI-centric network roadmap for telecom monetization
Why consolidation will reshape MDU connectivity (part 3/3) – Analyst Angle

Latest Articles

Enea White Paper: Why Intelligent AAA is the Swiss Army Knife of Telecom
Huawei outlines AI-centric network roadmap for telecom monetization
Why consolidation will reshape MDU connectivity (part 3/3) – Analyst Angle
Quantum Safe Networks Forum 2026

© 2026 RCR Wireless News All Right Reserved. Developed by Eight Hats.

Cookie Policy | Privacy Policy

RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
RCR Wireless
  • News
  • Channels
    • 5G
    • 6G
    • BSS OSS
    • Carriers
    • IoT
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Open RAN
    • Private 5G
    • Telco AI
    • Telco Cloud
    • Test & Measurement
  • Resources
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • White papers
    • AI Fundamentals
    • Analyst Angle
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Fundamentals
      • 5G NR Release 17
      • AI
        • Telco AI in 2025
    • Podcasts
      • Let’s Get Digital with Carrie Charles
      • Wireless Connectivity to Enable Industry 4.0 for the Middleprise
      • Well Technically…
      • Will 5G Change the World
      • Accelerating Industry 4.0 Digitalization
  • AI Infrastructure
  • Programs
  • Events
  • RCRtv
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
@2020 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign