Skip to main content

Your next car could have TiVo built-in

Powered by TiVo platform interface.
TiVo

TiVo, the company that defined modern TV watching in the era before on-demand streaming services, has announced a partnership with BMW that will see the automaker add TiVo’s video media platform to its vehicles. The addition of the Powered by TiVo platform will happen as an over-the-air update later in 2023 to BMW’s 5-Series vehicles and then slowly roll out to some of its other models.

The TiVo platform will include linear and on-demand streaming services with news, movies, and access to media libraries. The announcement comes just days after Google used its annual I/O event to debut its plans to add YouTube video streaming to Android Auto and Android Automotive car platforms. BMW also supports Android Auto in many of its vehicles but the company didn’t immediately describe how Android Auto and Powered by TiVo would coexist in the same interface.

Recommended Videos

“In-car entertainment becomes increasingly important for our customers,” said Ingo Lasslop, vice president of product management for digital products and services at BMW Group in a press release. “This collaboration with Xperi will allow us to deliver a world-class entertainment offering to our customers and transforms their time spent in the vehicle even more into a captivating and enjoyable experience.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

BMW isn’t the first car company to explore the use of streaming video in its vehicles. Teslas have been able to stream videos when parked since 2019. In 2022, Mercedes said it would begin integrating a variety of media options — including videos — via a partnership with Zync, and in March 2023, Porsche announced it will be leveraging the U.K. firm ScreenHits TV for a similar experience in its fleet of SUVs.

In 2022, TiVo, which is owned by Xperi, announced that it has created a smart TV operating system to compete with offerings from Roku, Google TV, and WebOS.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
Your car insurance company knows more about you than you think
Interior of the 2022 Volvo C40 Recharge electric car.

Your car insurance provider apparently knows much more about you than you might think -- and it's using that information to inform your rates. According to a new report from the New York Times, new cars with internet-enabled features are tracking your driving habits, and that data is being shared with data brokers who then sell the information to car insurance companies.

This is all done regardless of the driver's involvement. These days, when you buy a car, you often have the option to lower your insurance rates by downloading an app and letting your car track things like how harshly you brake and how you take corners. However, data collection happens regardless of whether you opt in to those features or not.

Read more
Your next TV likely will have AI, whether you want it or not
Hisense USA president David Gold at CES 2024 in Las Vegas.

There are two kinds of people when it comes to technology. Those who want their thing — be it a phone or car or TV — to do as much as possible in a single package. And those who'd prefer a more dedicated device, something that does fewer things, but does them very well.

Those in the latter group lost out years ago. And nowhere is that more apparent than in the television space, as evidenced at CES 2024 by the sheer onslaught of AI. You couldn't read a press release without running into a section that included AI. You couldn't make it through a press conference without an executive explaining how great their AI is.

Read more
Why your EV’s voltage matters, and what it means for your car’s charging speed
Front three-quarters view of a 2023 Kia EV6 GT in a desert setting.

Electric cars are slowly, but surely becoming commonplace, and they introduce a whole new generation of specifications that are worth caring about. Range is an obvious one -- but there's another metric that has a major impact on the overall experience of owning an electric car: voltage.

You'll often see the voltage of an electric car's battery pack touted in advertising. Hyundai, for instance, is proud of the 800 -volt battery in cars like the EV6 -- that's double the voltage of the 400V battery in the Tesla Model Y.

Read more