
At this week’s New York International Auto Show three well-known automotive brands - Scion (a Toyota brand), Jeep and Dodge (both Chrysler brands) - announced that Aha will be coming to the dashboards of 2014 model year vehicles.
At this week’s New York International Auto Show three well-known automotive brands - Scion (a Toyota brand), Jeep and Dodge (both Chrysler brands) - announced that Aha will be coming to the dashboards of 2014 model year vehicles.
The all-new Ford EcoSport will be the first Applink-enabled Ford vehicle to hit European roads.
We spent last week in Las Vegas along with 150,000 other tech enthusiasts to see all that’s new in electronics, gadgetry and connected cars. Our team gave hundreds of demos and showcased Aha’s latest to content and automotive partners, future partners, reporters, and analysts who stopped by our tent just outside of the LV Convention Center north and central halls.
At CES way back in January, Aha announced a contract with Honda, a very exciting milestone for our team.
Today, Aha and Honda shared more details of that partnership as Honda unveiled HondaLinkTM, a new, personalized driving experience that streams a world of information and entertainment to Honda vehicles. The HondaLink system featuring Aha content will first roll out in the all-new 2013 Honda Accord later this year.
Greetings from CES in Las Vegas! The Aha team is busy making headlines and having fun demoing our first Aha integration in a Subaru BRZ. Here’s a link to the press release we issued this morning announcing that Aha will be in Subaru and Honda vehicles beginning in model year 2013.
It has been a pretty busy week. Last Thursday we announced a partnership with Slacker to bring their personalized radio service into cars via Aha (check out the coverage here).
In case you didn’t catch the tweets, press release, news coverage or analysis in the past couple of weeks, Aha Mobile has been acquired by Harman International Industries.
Have you ever noticed that radio hasn’t significantly changed over the years? Sure you have fancier displays and clearer sound, but you are still pretty much stuck with whatever the stations want to give you…and on the schedule they decide.
Since we first hit the App Store last month, offering traffic coverage support for just a handful of cities, users from around the country have been asking when they could join in on the fun.
Have you ever found yourself slowing down in traffic and wished you knew what the drivers around the next bend were seeing out of their windshields? Maybe it’s a field of break lights and you should take that exit you are about to pass, or maybe traffic is moving again ahead and switching to surface streets will end up costing you 20 minutes of time you don’t have.