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Apple patent filing involves ‘wireless vehicle system for enhancing situational awareness’

Let the Apple Car rumors roll on. Apple has filed for a patent (number 20190347936) for a “wireless vehicle system for enhancing situational awareness.”

Vehicles are sometimes provided with safety equipment such as parking sensors, lane departure warning equipment, and blind-spot detection systems. Apple says that a parking sensor can be used to alert a driver when a vehicle is nearly in contact with a parked car or other stationary object, but has limited range and cannot be used to increase safety when a vehicle is being driven on a highway. 

Lane departure warning equipment can sense when a driver has started to drift into an adjacent lane, but doesn’t warn the driver about vehicles in the adjacent lane, notes Apple. The tech giant adds that blind spot detection systems can use radar or an infrared sensor to monitor a driver’s blind spot, but don’t offer complete coverage of areas around the driver’s vehicle and provide no information to the driver on the nature of intrusions into the driver’s blind spot. 

For these reasons, Apple says it would be desirable to be able to provide improved systems for providing drivers in vehicles with enhanced situational awareness when driving on a road. 

Here’s the summary of the invention: “Electronic equipment in vehicles may transmit and receive wireless messages. Each wireless message that is transmitted by a transmitter may include information on the vehicle from which it is being transmitted, information on the location of the transmitter within the vehicle, and other vehicle status information. Receiving equipment in vehicles may be used to receive the transmitted messages. 

“Received signal strength indicator information may be associated with the transmitted messages. Using the received signal strength indicator information and information on the locations of the transmitters within the vehicles in which the transmitters are installed, equipment in a receiving vehicle may determine locations for nearby vehicles. Alerts may be presented to a driver of a vehicle and other suitable actions may be taken based on the locations of nearby vehicles, vehicle type information, and other information regarding traffic in the vicinity of the driver.”

Of course, Apple files for — and is granted — lots of patents by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office. Many are for inventions that never see the light of day. However, you never can tell which ones will materialize in a real product.

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.