Toyota Motor Corp. is forming a joint venture with Microsoft Corp. to consolidate much of the carmaker’s global research in telematics, data analytics and network security services as the auto industry expands connected-vehicle technologies.
The Toyota Connected venture will be headed by Zack Hicks, chief information officer at Toyota Motor North America, and will be based in Plano, Texas. The initial investment will be $5.5 million, the automaker said today.
Toyota plans to use data science through Microsoft’s Azure cloud technology to develop services that “help to humanize the driving experience,’’ according to a statement. “Toyota Connected will help free our customers from the tyranny of technology,’’ Hicks said in the statement.
Automakers are expanding connected-car services as the industry heads toward technologies such as autonomous vehicles. Telematics combines computers and wireless technology to provide services such as infotainment and real-time traffic updates to moving vehicles. Toyota and Microsoft have been collaborating in this area since 2011.
Kurt DelBene, executive vice president of corporate strategy and planning at Microsoft, said the company will work with Toyota Connected “to make driving more personal, intuitive and safe.”
The new venture will study everything from cars that help each other analyze traffic patterns to use-based insurance pricing to connecting drivers with information and security services in their homes. The effort comes amid a broader push by the world’s largest automaker to accelerate its research into artificial intelligence and robotics.