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Nippon Seiki’s head-up display technology provides glimpse of automotive future

Pioneer company in the HUD market expands operations to 11 countries including China

Supported by:Discovery Reports
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<p>Pioneer company in the HUD market expands operations to 11 countries including China</p>
Country Business Reports interviews and articles by Discovery Reports www.discoveryreports.com
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Navigating a dark and unfamiliar road, a driver suddenly feels a slight yet nagging vibration. He checks the car’s tyre pressure and discovers his right front tyre is significantly under-inflated. Looking up the nearest car shop on a map, he notes that he can reach it within five minutes, breathes a sigh of relief and carefully speeds away.

This may seem like an ordinary road scenario – if not for the driver not having to leave the vehicle or take his eyes off the road, thanks to his head-up display (HUD), which projects all the real-time information he needed right onto the windshield.

“More than turning science fiction into reality using optical technology, HUDs are now revolutionising the automotive landscape,” says Hirotoshi Takada, president and CEO of Nippon Seiki, a pioneer and worldwide leader in the HUD market.

Since introducing its first HUD in 1997, Nippon Seiki has seen HUDs evolving from displaying basic information to featuring night vision, voice recognition, gesture control and augmented reality. It envisions the product further elevating into internet-equipped “connected car” systems that are able to calculate the vehicle’s carbon dioxide emissions and warn the driver before a potential accident.

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“Much like the automotive industry, which often takes cues from technological advances in related hi-tech industries such as aviation and defence, we follow the lead of carmakers – consulting and collaborating closely with them,” Takada says.

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