This article was really hard to read. Here's my attempt at a summary:
* The author expects new cars to be networked and to have beefy CPUs.
* There are lots of cars, and each car will use lots of data. To network all these cars, you'll need investment from telecom companies like carriers.
* Today the car's systems don't talk to each other, or the internet that much. Once you network them, it'll be good for companies who make cars to see how their product is used in the wild.
* Now that you have smart cars, people can write apps for them. The author thinks this will be a large market with a few killer apps.
* Car's are really complex, and were not designed to be networked. You should expect a lot of security issues during this transition.
* The author expects new cars to be networked and to have beefy CPUs.
* There are lots of cars, and each car will use lots of data. To network all these cars, you'll need investment from telecom companies like carriers.
* Today the car's systems don't talk to each other, or the internet that much. Once you network them, it'll be good for companies who make cars to see how their product is used in the wild.
* Now that you have smart cars, people can write apps for them. The author thinks this will be a large market with a few killer apps.
* Car's are really complex, and were not designed to be networked. You should expect a lot of security issues during this transition.