Is Volvo right to kill the traditional car key?

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Written by Ollie Kew
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Volvo wants you to bin your car key. Not right now, but from 2017, which is when the Swedish carmaker will start offering its customers the option of buying its cars with no physical key. Instead, you"ll unlock the doors, start the engine, and do all the other, er, keyish stuff via a smartphone app that communicates with your V90, XC90 or whatever via Bluetooth.For Volvo, the benefits are plentiful. Less bulk in your pocket. The ability to share cars far more easily if you"ve booked a holiday hire car, for example, you could simply exit the airport, find the car"s tagged location via GPS then stride up to it and tap your phone to get on your way. No waiting around for key handover, either when you arrive, jet-lagged and throbbing with DVT, or when you"re late for the final boarding call on the way home. Alternatively, families could all access the same car via their phones, without needing to meet to exchange keys. There is logic here in this brave new Minority Report world.There"s added security too. If someone pickpockets your car keys, your wheels are effectively in their (illegal) possession. But if your car"s got no key, and demands a smartphone to be unlocked, that"s a different story. Sure, the unpalatable individual could pinch your phone, but what if you"re using a passcode, or fingerprint recognition to unlock it? Better luck next time, crims.

Date written: 19 Feb 2016

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