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Thursday, April 3, 2025

Toyota, Microsoft beef up Gazoo.com Net service

by

20130429

TOKYO–Toy­ota is team­ing up with Mi­crosoft for an In­ter­net ser­vice that links cars, home com­put­ers and smart­phones so users can find near­by tourist spots, con­nect on so­cial net­works and learn about new mod­els.The beefed up ver­sion of Toy­ota's In­ter­net site Gazoo.com starts May 30 in Japan, and will be based on "cloud" com­put­ing from Mi­crosoft Corp. called Win­dows Azure. Over­seas plans are still un­de­cid­ed.

Ac­cord­ing to the US soft­ware gi­ant, it is the first time the tech­nol­o­gy, which al­so us­es Share­point soft­ware, is be­ing used for a com­pa­ny site.Gazoo.com users tripled over the last five years to 1.65 mil­lion. Toy­ota Mo­tor Corp. said Fri­day it wants to raise that to two mil­lion over the next year.All the world's ma­jor au­tomak­ers are work­ing on sim­i­lar tech­nol­o­gy to bring au­tos up-to-date with the In­ter­net age, from find­ing restau­rants to help­ing en­sure safe dri­ving.But a ma­jor mo­tive for Toy­ota is ap­peal­ing to younger Japan­ese, who are rapid­ly los­ing in­ter­est in buy­ing cars and are spend­ing their mon­ey on smart­phones and video games. The trend is so wide­spread there is a coined phrase, "ku­ru­ma ba­nare," or "de­par­ture from cars."

Among the Net con­tent in the works are video games, shop­ping-site links, vir­tu­al events and a spe­cial so­cial net­work to chat about cars, ac­cord­ing to Toy­ota. A smart­phone ap­pli­ca­tion will guide dri­vers with an elec­tron­ic voice to 30,000 des­ti­na­tions from 250 routes.The site will al­so of­fer in­for­ma­tion on more than 3,000 new and used mod­els, in­clud­ing in­ter­views with en­gi­neers.Switch­ing to Mi­crosoft's cloud com­put­ing will cut costs for op­er­at­ing the ser­vices, al­though Toy­ota plans to in­vest more mon­ey in new con­tent for Gazoo.com.

Toy­ota reached an agree­ment with Mi­crosoft in April 2011, to work to­geth­er on telem­at­ics, or net­work tech­nol­o­gy for cars.Toy­ota looked at oth­er cloud com­put­ing ser­vices be­fore pick­ing Mi­crosoft for the lat­est project, said Hi­royu­ki Ya­ma­da, an ex­ec­u­tive at e-Toy­ota, which looks over such tech­nol­o­gy.It is un­clear whether the site will re­al­ly lead to car sales, but Toy­ota will be able to tap in­to da­ta on con­sumer be­hav­iour, as well as try to re­vive Japan­ese peo­ple's fad­ing in­ter­est in cars, he said.

Gazoo.com is the brain­child of Akio Toy­o­da, the pres­i­dent and grand­son of Toy­ota's founder. Well versed in In­ter­net tech­nol­o­gy, Toy­o­da was ahead of his time in fore­see­ing the im­por­tance of so­cial net­works and stress­ing how Toy­ota needs a pres­ence in the bl­o­gos­phere.Toy­ota has a part­ner­ship with an­oth­er US cloud com­put­ing com­pa­ny, Sales­force.com, which runs a so­cial net­work for Toy­ota plug-in hy­brid own­ers so they can see how ef­fi­cient­ly they have been dri­ving and be alert­ed when their ve­hi­cle has recharged. Toy­o­da al­so pi­o­neered that part­ner­ship. (AP)


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