February 11, 2009 5:46 PM

Get Ready For The Web... In Your Car

(AP)  When Stephen Devine and his family drove from their home in Massachusetts to New York City, he spent two frustrating hours trying to find a place to park his 9-foot-high camper van, which won't fit in most garages.

In the end, his 17-year-old daughter found a place to park online - and she didn't even have to leave the van to do it.

Devine's van is equipped with TracNet, a system that allows passengers to access the Internet on a vehicle's video screens. Launched in September by Middletown, R.I.-based KVH Industries Inc., TracNet brings the Internet to the installed screens in a car, truck, RV or boat. It also turns the entire vehicle into a wireless hot spot, so passengers can use their laptops to go online.

Devine - who also purchased KVH's satellite TV system, called TracVision, when he bought his camper a month ago - said the value of in-vehicle Internet became obvious at that moment in New York.

"For me, that just paid for itself, because I was five minutes away from going home," said Devine, of Hanover, Mass.

KVH also makes TracVision, which provides satellite TV service in vehicles and boats; TracPhone, a satellite communications service for boats; and precision navigation and guidance systems for the military. The company had 2005 revenue of $71.3 million, including $49 million in mobile satellite sales.

While TracNet is still very new, KVH spokesman Chris Watson said there has been interest from owners of recreational vehicles and boats. He also predicted the service would be a hit with car services, which see it as a way to provide a new convenience for customers.

But KVH believes the demand has the potential to be much wider. Watson cited research by J.D. Power and Associates which found that more than half of full-size sport utility vehicles, 40 percent of luxury SUVs and 40 percent of minivans now come with video screens.

"Once a video screen shows up, people have a preference for live content," Watson said.

Art Spinella, president of Bandon, Ore.-based CNW Marketing Research, which specializes in the auto sector, agreed.

"A large percentage of folks under 40 would like to have in-car access to the Internet, rather than just on their cell phone or BlackBerry," he said. "If it's priced right, there's a market."

The current price is $1,995 for the automotive version of TracNet. The system operates on Verizon Wireless' high-speed network, which costs another $60 to $80 a month. There is also a $10 monthly charge for MSN TV, the service from Microsoft Corp. that brings the Internet to TV screens. The consumer provides the screens.

An MSN TV portal provides access to e-mail, instant messaging, weather maps, chat rooms, news and other features. While Web sites outside of the portal are fully accessible, most are not formatted correctly for TV screens and may not look quite right, even though the content is all there. Another limitation is the system's dependance on the Verizon network: Where there is no cell phone service, there won't be any Internet access either.

As with TracVision, TracNet can be used on a screen visible to the driver only when the car is in park. When the vehicle is in motion, that screen automatically switches to navigation.

Devine, 48, purchased TracNet for his camper van with both personal and business uses in mind. He heads an architecture and construction management firm and plans to put the camper at a job site for a contractor to live out of.

"If he wanted to go online and e-mail us or look up some information," the contractor would be able to use the TracNet system to do it, Devine said.

Robert Ramsden, of Key Largo, Fla., said he purchased TracNet for his boat as a way to let him cruise more and still manage his business. The 67-year-old and his wife own four Intelligent Office franchises, which provide "virtual office" services to businesses.

Previously, if the couple wanted Internet access on their boat, they would have to pull into a marina and hope it had wireless access. TracNet has made that unnecessary.

"It works really well," Ramsden said. "My wife and I both could be on the boat with our laptops, and just log in, and use the wireless capabilities of it."

But Ramsden said the idea of mobile Internet in a car wouldn't hold much appeal for him.

"Our car is what we go back and forth to work in," he said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by November 9, 2006 7:22 PM EST
This really is not new technology, I have been carrying a laptop with me for more than 10 years accessing WiFi points across the country, there are just more places to get it from now
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by Syndicate November 9, 2006 3:58 PM EST
Bluestardad: I highly recomend the Ford Fusion it is all the rave right now. The car magizines love it. They are bragging about better than Toyota quality, All wheel drive and cheaper than a Toyota or Honda that don't offer all wheel drive. I would have got one but I really wanted a Mustang. I'm really Excited about the Ford Edge too. This things awesome. I am slowly leading my wife in this direction. No I don't work for Ford. Just an Ethusiast. There is also the 500 hp Cobra but good luck there hard to get.
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by Syndicate November 9, 2006 3:51 PM EST
Global warming is caused by the decrease in the number of pirates. The data matches way to well to be accidental. Actually I put a lot of thought into this and it makes perfect sense. A dvd based navigation system cost $2,000 on a new car. a laptop computer cost $500. With an internet conection I can go to google maps and find the nearest star bucks. I can also load up all my music and not have to mess with one of those IPODs. The greatest advantage is customization. If you don't like where the virtual radio button is on the screen, move it. You could also have multiple screens for back seat passengers they could watch youtube on long trips. OF course if you cut the right wire on the back of the unit it will work with the car in gear ;)
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by kalatur November 9, 2006 12:32 PM EST
zakk_coffee, do you really think that computers in cars has anything to do with global warming? Maybe global warming was caused by men walking on the moon.

Just remember, you are free to drive a car without a computer. Just as you are free to drive a horse and buggy.
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by zakk_coffee November 9, 2006 11:30 AM EST
What next computers in yours shoes? or tv's on your belt? It is starting to become a world of computers and smart stuff but what happens when it all gose hay wire and blows the country up or worse the world all they need to find is to find a way to stop golbal warming. and better ways to use new fuel like steam or water of stuff like that.
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by bluestardad November 9, 2006 11:09 AM EST
AMERICAN CAR MANUFACTURING NEEDS TO MAKE A RELIABLE COST EFFECTIVE CAR THEN THEY CAN PUT IN ALL THE OTHER BOLOGNA!
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