Automotive companies generally agree that the industry is moving towards the age of the software-defined vehicle (SDV), but what they don’t agree on is what constitutes an SDV. Definitions vary, and in many cases, the understanding of this buzzword is vague. Some suggest a vehicle is software-defined when the majority of functions are realised through software. Others dismiss that as simply ‘software-enabled’. For software specialist Elektrobit, a vehicle becomes software-defined when the wider value proposition is provided through software.
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“It’s only an SDV when you can change the experience of the vehicle through software,” says Elektrobit’s Moritz Neukirchner, Senior Director of Strategic Product Management for Software-Defined Vehicle. “The underlying value proposition is broad, but basically it provides software value to the end customer faster.”
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