Tag Archive for GM

GM to Build New Data Center in Michigan

Michigan Detroit Michigan automaker General Motors (GM) will invest $130 million to build an enterprise data center at the GM Technical Center, in Warren, MI reports Data Center Knowledge.  According to the article the new data center, the  Information Technology Operations and Command Center, will allow GM to cut operating costs by consolidating its global IT infrastructure into a more efficient facility.

General MotorsGM said it will renovate and expand the former Cadillac administrative building on its Warren Tech Center campus. Design is under way on the renovation and construction, with the final phase scheduled for completion in 2015. The project is expected to create 25 high-tech jobs. InformationWeek says the state-of-the-art center will allow GM to merge tech operations spread across many sites into a single facility, reduce IT operating costs, and cut energy consumption by 40%. The company expects the data center to meet requirements for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification by the U.S Green Building Council.

DCK reports the new enterprise data center will use a “modular design” to allow for future expansion.  Data Center Modular designs often use factory-built structures, but the term is increasingly being used to describe phased build-outs using pods of raised-floor space. The facility will contain IT laboratories to run computer simulations for vehicle deigns, and serve as a hub for monitoring GM’s digital applications globally. “The Enterprise Data Center will contain technology laboratories and a global information technology operations center that will serve as the hub for monitoring General Motors information technology applications around the world,” GM Vice President and chief information officer Terry Kline told reporters.

New GM enterprise data center

A rendering of the $130 million Information Technology Operations and Command Center at GM's Warren Technical Center.

“This new facility and other GM data centers around the world support the tools the company needs to design, build and sell the world’s best vehicles through digital applications enabling all business functions,” said Mr. Kline. “This investment is possible because of the cooperation between GM, the Warren community and the Michigan Economic Growth Authority (MEGA). We think the result is a win for everybody involved.”

The automaker received a tax credit from MEGA to support the $130 million redevelopment of the computer center. The Warren city council also unanimously approved a brownfield redevelopment plan for space at the sprawling Technical Center campus.

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A few years back,  I worked for about 18 months at the Tech Center, at the Vehicle Engineering Center (VEC). The best part of the job was going over to the Cadillac building for lunch.  I recall the cafeteria having leather walls and real china with the Cadillac logo.

Car Technology

GM Ventures Invests in Powermat

General Motors Xconomy – Detroit reports that GM Ventures, the Detroit automaker’s venture capital arm has invested $5 million in Powermat the Commerce Township, MI start-up. A multiyear, multimillion-dollar deal with Powermat gives General Motors (GM) exclusive rights to place the company’s portable-device charging technology in its cars for a year. according to Micky Bly, the company’s director of hybrid vehicles. The Chevy Volt and certain Cadillac models will be the first GM cars to the Powermat accessories. The New York Times reports that at this years CES GM demonstrated four wireless charging positions in the Chevy Volt.

GM Ventures has also invested in Indiana-based electric car startup Bright Automotive and Ann Arbor-based battery developer Sakti3. Also see this earlier post.

Car Theft by Antenna

MIT’s Technology Review reports that researchers at ETH Zurich in Switzerland have successfully attacked eight car manufacturers’ passive keyless entry and start systems. The researchers examined 10 car models from eight manufacturers. They were able to take all 10 by intercepting and relaying signals from the cars to their wireless keys because the key transmits its signals up to around 100 meters. The attack works no matter what cryptography and protocols the key and car use to communicate with each other.

Car keyless entryThe researchers tested a few scenarios. An attacker could watch a parking lot and have an accomplice watch as car owners as entered a nearby store. The accomplice would only need to be within eight meters of the targeted owner’s key fob, making it easy to avoid arousing suspicion. In another scenario, a car owner might leave a car key on a table near a window. An antenna placed outside the house was able to communicate with the key, allowing the researchers then to start the car parked out front and drive away.

The researchers concluded that manufacturers will need to add secure technology that allows the car to confirm that the key is in fact nearby.

New Standard for Automotive-Grade Wireless Modules

Sierra Wireless (SWIR) recently introduced what the firm calls, the industry’s first suite of embedded wireless technology modules designed specifically for automotive manufacturers. The Canadian firm is banking on the emerging trend to include telematics, infotainment, navigation assistance and remote diagnostics in new cars within the next few years according to an article on ITNewsLink.com. The firm believes these applications will need reliable built-in connections to cellular networks. The new Sierra Wireless modules will uses 2G and 3G network technologies and frequency bands used worldwide to provide the connectivity customers are demanding.

The manufacturer says these units are the first wireless modules developed from the ground up to achieve compliance with automotive specifications.  ITNewsLink.com says the Sierra Wireless AirPrime AR Series design encompasses:

  • Tolerance for up to 1,000 thermal shock cycles
  • Full certification with ISO 9001:2000 quality standards and ISO/TS 16949:2002 manufacturing processes
  • Extended operating temperature range from -40 to 85 degrees Celsius
  • Compliance with multiple automotive manufacturing and quality processes including AQPQ, PPAP, PCN, and 8D
  • Solder-down form factor and optional Embedded SIM to create a more reliable and less expensive solution
  • An open platform for customer application development, including dedicated APIs for telematics applications.

Wireless Car Sensors Vulnerable to Hackers

MIT’s Technology Review reports that hackers could “hijack” the wireless pressure sensors built into many cars’ tires, researchers have found. Criminals might then track a vehicle or force its electronic control system to malfunction, the University of South Carolina and Rutgers University researchers say. The team successfully hijacked two popular tire-pressure-monitoring systems (TPMS).

As automakers add more technology and computers to cars, and connect those computers to critical components, in-car systems will need to be secured against hackers, experts warn.

The systems tested by the South Carolina-Rutgers team had very little security in place–they mainly relied on the fact that the communications protocol is not widely published. “In doing TPMS this way, [automakers] have left the door open to wireless attackers,” says Travis Taylor, one of the researchers. The team could eavesdrop on communications and, in some circumstances, alter messages in-transit. That let the team give false readings to a car’s dashboard. They could also track a vehicle’s movements using the unique IDs of the pressure sensors, and even cause a car’s ECU to fail completely.

“Normally, these [attacks would] result in small problems,” Mr. Taylor says. “But I see practical danger and damage that can happen from TPMS exploitation.” “The security and privacy problems that the researchers identify in TPMS systems are likely just one among many that will challenge the automotive industry in the years to come,” says Stefan Savage, a UC San Diego professor of computer science and engineering.

Ford Installs Sync Software via Wi-Fi

Ford Sync The Detroit Bureau reports that Ford is the first automaker to use Wi-Fi to send software to vehicles along an assembly line. The automaker is sending infotainment software to Wi-Fi-enabled MYFord Touch-equipped vehicles like the Edge.

Ford installed  Wi-Fi technology at its Oakville, Ontario, plant where it builds the Ford Edge and Lincoln MKX. Next up for Wi-Fi updates will be the upcoming Ford Explorer, built in Chicago, and then plants that build the Focus around the world.

Wi-Fi capability eliminates the need for building, stocking multiple SYNC hardware modules, thus reducing manufacturing complexity and saving cost.  “Using wireless software installation via Wi-Fi, we can stock just one type of SYNC module powering MyFord Touch and loaded with a basic software package,” explained Sukhwinder Wadhwa, SYNC global platform manager. “We eliminate around 90 unique part numbers, each of which would have to be updated every time a change is made – this system really boosts quality control.”

“Turning an assembly plant – with steel beams everywhere and high-voltage cabling throughout; everything you could imagine that would interfere with a radio signal – into an access point that would achieve 100 percent success was a huge challenge,” Mr. Wadhwa said.

GM Recycles BP Gulf Oil Spill Waste Into Volt

General Motors (NYSE : GM) has intercepted 100 miles of used oil control booms from the BP Gulf of Mexico mega oil spill, (which I wrote about here, here, here and here) preventing them from going into landfills. Instead, TheDetroitBureau.com reports that oil-soaked booms are transformed into plastic parts for the Chevy Volt.

Mike Robinson, GM vice president of Environment, Energy and Safety policy explained to TheDetroitBureau that the automaker has been able to recycle the polypropylene plastics used in the oil booms set out to contain and capture the oil spilled by a runaway British Petroleum (NYSE :BP) well.  GM and its suppliers are turning the re-cycled material into plastic parts used in the Volt, such as a shroud for the radiator according to GM. “Creative recycling is one extension of GM’s overall strategy to reduce its environmental impact,” Mr. Robinson said, the Detroit based auto maker already finds ways to cut landfilling at 76 of its facilities. The recycling of Gulf oil booms, he added, “is a good example of using this expertise and applying it to a greater magnitude.”

In the article Chris Miller vice president of sales and market for GDC Inc. says the old booms are mixed with other recycled material, including used tires, and processed to yield a plastic resin which can be shaped into a variety of plastic parts. “The recycled resin is a lot less expensive than virgin resin,” he said. In fact, GM’s Robinson described the overall process as “cost-neutral,” meaning the final parts and components cost it the same as those produced by more conventional processes. “Recycling the booms will result in the production of more than 100,000 pounds of plastic resin for the vehicle components,” said John Bradburn, manager of GM’s waste-reduction efforts, eliminating an equal amount of waste that would otherwise have been incinerated or sent to landfills. “This was purely a matter of helping out,”  Mr. Bradburn told TheDetroitBureau. “If sent to a landfill, these materials would have taken hundreds of years to begin to break down, and we didn’t want to see the spill further impact the environment. We knew we could identify a beneficial reuse of this material given our experience,” Mr. Bradburn added.

Photo by Brian Merchant

GM’s Bradburn says the project demonstrates the booms, which are also widely used around construction projects and limited spills, don’t have to buried or burned but can be recycled. He also noted it should encourage the manufacturers of the booms to make them easier to recycle. TheDetroitBureau says besides GDC, GM worked with several partners throughout the recovery and development processes. Heritage Environmental managed the collection of boom materials along the Louisiana coast. Mobile Fluid Recovery stepped in next, using a massive high-speed drum that spun the booms until dry and eliminated all the absorbed oil and wastewater. Lucent Polymers used its process to then manipulate the material into the physical state necessary for plastic die-mold production.

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Hmm- something must be changing at GM, when I worked at a GM tech center in the 1990′s there was not many green efforts. Even if this is a marketing ploy to beef up the Volt’s green-cred’s, it is a good step. Lets hope they keep up the imaginative thinking.

NASA Robot Has Links to GM

NASA recently had a coming out party at the Space Station Processing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center for one of its newest project, a human-like robot called the Robonaut 2 (R2). The R2 robot has a human shape, weighs about 300 pounds, runs on a battery and will join the team of the space shuttle Discovery on  STS-133 mission to the International Space Station. STS-133 is scheduled for takeoff on November 1, 2010 . Although it will initially only take part in operational tests, upgrades could eventually allow the robot to realize its true purpose, helping spacewalking astronauts with tasks outside the space station.

The dexterous humanoid astronaut helper is now tweeting at www.twitter.com/AstroRobonaut.

With the help of its team, R2  sent its first tweet on July 26.

I liked the big blue GM logo on R2. This is another example of the value of a domestic auto industry for the good of the U.S.  Alan Taub, vice president of GM’s global research and development said in a press release, “Partnerships between organizations such as GM and NASA help ensure space exploration, road travel and manufacturing can become even safer in the future,” Taub said.

GM’s manufacturing engineering team is already working to find potential applications for R2’s array of vision, motion and sensor technologies that will aid workers in manufacturing operations. According to Taub, “The work done by GM and NASA engineers also will help us validate manufacturing technologies that will improve the health and safety of our GM team members at our manufacturing plants throughout the world.”

“For GM, this is about safer cars and safer plants,” says the GM VP for global research and development. “When it comes to future vehicles, the advancements in controls, sensors and vision technology can be used to develop advanced vehicle safety systems. The partnership’s vision is to explore advanced robots working together in harmony with people, building better, higher quality vehicles in a safer, more competitive manufacturing environment.”

Maybe it will be a reminder to politicians like Dick Shelby of AL who opposed loans to GM to further the interests of the foreign car assemblers in Alabama.

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