AVL Focus - Issue 2023

THE AVL MOBILITY TREND MAGAZINE - No. 1 2023

4 4

embedded software development

New Car, New Architecture

BMW recently introduced its model of a heated seat subscription, for 17

Euros per month. You do not have to be a prophet to predict that it will

show strong seasonal fluctuations. However, as new on-demand services

will change their business models, OEMs are struggling to understand how

the software inside has to be designed and set up.

The centerpiece of embedded software progress is the EE (electrical/elec-

tronic) architecture. As electronics hardware, network communications,

software applications and wiring converge into one integrated system that

controls an ever-increasing number of vehicle functions, OEMs and sup-

pliers are looking to outside expertise.

AVL’s major advantage is its knowledge of

mechanics, but also its experience in devel-

oping e-mobility solutions and software

functions, which goes back decades. Com-

pared to newcomers, AVL’s know-how of

the entire system architecture – and its ele-

ments – ­is incomparable.

That’s crucial to reliability, as the transfor-

mation inside the vehicle is enormous: An

average car today has up to 200 million lines

of code, which are expected to grow to 300

million lines by the end of the decade. Cen-

tralization is key: What used to be up to

130 ECUs in a car is now centralized on

3 – 5 in-vehicle servers, according to expert

Dirk Geyer, AVL Software and Functions.

The permanent change requires constant up-

dating and testing, traditional fields of com-

petence of AVL.

“EE is nothing completely new, having

come into the vehicle with the turn signal

and radio decades ago,” says Stefan Schmid,

Managing Director of AVL Software and

Functions, but is now in a vital role as high-performance computing and

Big Data have proven to be gamechangers. “We’re going to have a pretty

dynamic future,” he says.  

WE’RE GOING TO

HAVE A PRETTY

DYNAMIC FUTURE.”

Stefan Schmid

Managing Director of AVL Software

and Functions

One of the key drivers is Autono-

mous Driving, which is still under-

estimated. Once Level 3 or Level 4

features are on the road, users will

have more time to consume apps.

Schwab therefore predicts a “revo-

lution by small steps”.

As revolutions are inevitable, col-

laboration is unavoidable – an es-

sential basis for success in this fast-

changing world. In AVL, we work

not only with OEMs and Tier1s,

but also with major US software

companies and cybersecurity spe-

cialists. This work sets things in mo-

tion and allows developments to be

multi-perspective. You will feel the

difference the next time you log in.