K. VENKATESH PRASAD: THE SYNC SQUAD

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K. VENKATESH PRASAD: THE SYNC SQUAD

  • As the group and technical leader of Ford’s Infotronics Research & Advanced Engineering team, K. Venkatesh Prasad is responsible for the research, architecture, standards, applications development and vehicle system integration of electrical, electronics and embedded software technologies
  • Prasad grew up in Chennai, India

As the group and technical leader of Ford’s Infotronics Research & Advanced Engineering team, the birthplace of Ford SYNC®, K. Venkatesh Prasad is Ford’s “What’s Next” guy, responsible for the research, architecture, standards, applications development and vehicle system integration of electrical, electronics and embedded software technologies.

In the early 1960s he was just a small boy in Chennai, India, who was fascinated with electricity. As a precocious five-year-old undeterred by his parents’ heed to not play with wires, Prasad conducted his first experiment with electrons by plugging two wet shoelaces into a 220-volt power outlet.

“That shocking lesson stays etched in my mind today,” he said.

Before joining Ford Motor Company in 1996, Prasad worked as a senior scientist at RICOH Innovations in Menlo Park, Calif., developing automatic “lip reading” as a novel human-machine interface. In addition, he was at Caltech and the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., where he worked on the world’s first telerobotic visual surface inspection system to help design the International Space Station.

Attracted by an open-ended challenge to discover ways to integrate “intelligence” into cars and trucks, Prasad joined Ford to work with a small group of engineers in the development of adaptive headlamp and lane-mark detection technologies.

“When I first met with Ford decision-makers, they asked me what I knew about cars and I told them, ‘Not much.’  They said, ‘That’s who we need…we have 15,000 engineers here who know everything about cars and trucks.  What we need is someone from outside our box to help us make our products safer, cleaner and the journey more fun.’  That intrigued me,” said Prasad.

As Ford’s “What’s Next” guy, Prasad in the late 1990s was imaging the vehicle as a software platform where features and services could be beamed in from the outside – without incremental built-in hardware. This was during the time when others were hot to find better ways to build in phones and trunk-mounted six-disc CD changers.

“In early 2000, formats started to change drastically – no longer were mechanical devices necessary to play music, only a piece of software.  Everyone started carrying cell phones,” he said.  “I envisioned transforming the move-alone vehicle into an inter-networked platform-on-wheels so people could use the devices they already had in their vehicle and reduce the steps needed to do things.  Such connectivity required a revolutionary change of thinking.”

That revolutionary mind-set led to the development of Ford SYNC.  Software-based, the voice-activated SYNC system allows Ford, Lincoln and Mercury vehicle owners to seamlessly connect to their cell phone, MP3 players and a host of other features and services in and through their vehicle – hands-free. 
For the “what’s next” guy at Ford, the upgradeable SYNC platform is only limited by the imagination and market acceptance of emerging digital connectivity technologies.  The immediate next on Prasad’s list:  Social networking. 

“SYNC is helping Ford redefine the automotive user experience,” said Prasad, “and social networking is redefining how many of our future car buyers prefer to communicate with each other.  Our challenge is to make sure we leverage the capabilities of the SYNC platform so that social networking in the vehicle is safe and without distraction to the driver.”

Personal Insights and Fun Facts

  • Among many other degrees, Prasad earned a Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey in 1990.

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About Ford Motor Company
Ford Motor Company, a global automotive industry leader based in Dearborn, Mich., manufactures or distributes automobiles across six continents.  With about 201,000 employees and about 90 plants worldwide, the companys automotive brands include Ford, Lincoln, Mercury and Volvo.  The company provides financial services through Ford Motor Credit Company.  For more information regarding Fords products, please visit www.ford.com.

Oct. 28, 2009

 

Content provided by Ford.com

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