October 21, 2004 8:27 AM PDT
Detroit's new song: Have iPod, will travel
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Electronics companies demonstrated new products at a conference here this week that offer better ways to link Apple Computer's audio player to a vehicle's stereo, replacing the problematic and low-quality methods of radio transmitters and cassette adapters.
A Lynbrook, N.Y.-based company called Multi Technology Equipment is selling a box the size of a cigarette pack that lets almost any car stereo control an iPod, with the controls for changing tracks on CDs now able to skip through playlists. The company's Ipod2car adapter also charges an iPod, which would typically be mounted on a dashboard.
The $190 Ipod2car adapter is manufactured by Peripheral Electronics, a veteran supplier of aftermarket audio accessories for cars. Ron Freeman, Peripheral's chief operating officer, said that his engineers had to reverse-engineer Apple's iPod communications protocol to make the device work.
Texas Instruments, meanwhile, demonstrated what's essentially a tiny custom PC--complete with hard drive--that can rip CDs that are inserted into the dashboard and control an iPod linked through its USB port.
The unit uses an ARM926 microprocessor for voice recognition and display control, and a digital signal processor for audio encoding, echo cancellation and noise reduction. Texas Instruments says the system, which runs a POSIX-based real-time operating system from QNX, also can support Compact Flash, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and GPS connections.
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