Feel the View

Ford in Italy, together with agency GTB Rome, teams up with Aedo, a local start-up that creates devices for people with visual impairments. Together they design a prototype device that attaches to a car window and decodes the landscape outside, allowing visually impaired passengers to experience it with the tip of their fingers.

The device transforms the flat surface of a car window into a tactile display. The prototype captures photos via an integrated camera and converts them into haptic sensory stimuli. The result is not primarily visual. It is perceptible through touch and hearing.

Why this matters as accessible experience design

This is an assistive interface built around a real, emotional moment. Looking out of a window during a drive. It treats “the view” as an experience that can be translated into other senses, rather than a privilege reserved for sighted passengers.

The product idea in one line

Capture what is outside the car, then render it on the window surface as a tactile and audio layer that can be explored in real time.

What to take from this if you build inclusive innovation

  • Start with a human moment. Here, it is shared travel and the desire to participate in what others are seeing.
  • Use the environment as the interface. The window is already where attention goes. It becomes the display.
  • Translate, do not replace. The concept does not mimic sight. It converts the same input into touch and sound.

A few fast answers before you act

What is “Feel the View”?

A Ford Italy concept with GTB Rome and Aedo that prototypes a car-window device converting outside landscapes into a tactile and audio experience for visually impaired passengers.

How does the prototype work at a high level?

An integrated camera captures what is outside, then the system transforms the input into haptic stimuli on the window surface, supported by audio cues.

What is the core design principle?

Make the experience accessible by translating the same real-world scene into senses the user can rely on, in the moment.

Volvo Concierge Services

Volvo is actively experimenting with moving beyond simply building and selling cars. With Volvo Keyless Cars and Volvo In-Car Delivery, the direction is clear. Build a service layer around the vehicle. In its latest effort, Volvo creates a concierge-style service ecosystem that gives customers access to third-party service providers who can remotely refuel the car, run a car wash, handle servicing, and more.

The heart of Volvo Concierge Services is the digital key. A one-time-use, location- and time-specific key that gives an approved service provider access to the vehicle. That matters because it keeps the car secure and removes the need for the owner to meet someone and physically hand over keys. Whether the supplier is a refuelling company, a valet parking attendant, or Volvo itself for maintenance, the provider uses an app to remotely unlock the car and allow the engine to turn on.

The Volvo Concierge Services are currently being tested in the San Francisco Bay Area with owners of the new Volvo XC90 SUVs and S90 sedans.

The digital key is the unlock. The services are the business model

This is not just about convenience. It is a structural shift. Once access becomes software, it can be controlled precisely. Who gets access. For how long. Where. For what purpose. That is the foundation you need to turn a connected car into a platform for partners and post-sale services.

Why “remote access without handover” changes behaviour

Traditional servicing and add-on services create friction. Scheduling. Meeting. Waiting. Key logistics. Concierge Services reduces that friction by making the car addressable when it is parked, and by making access safe enough to involve third parties.

What to pressure-test before you scale a service ecosystem

  • Trust and governance. Who qualifies as an approved provider. What is logged. What can be revoked instantly.
  • Edge cases. What happens if something goes wrong mid-service. What support paths exist for customer and provider.
  • Consistency of experience. If third-party services vary in quality, the brand still owns the perception.
  • Security by design. One-time, time-bound, location-bound access is powerful. It has to be implemented rigorously.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Volvo Concierge Services?

A service ecosystem around Volvo cars that enables approved third-party providers to refuel, wash, service, and handle other tasks with controlled remote access to the vehicle.

What enables the service providers to access the car?

A one-time-use, location- and time-specific digital key that unlocks the vehicle through an app without physical key handover.

Where is it being tested?

In the San Francisco Bay Area, with owners of Volvo XC90 SUVs and S90 sedans.

What is the core strategic takeaway?

When access becomes software, the car can support a partner service layer that keeps creating value after purchase.

Volvo Keyless Cars

You land at Gothenburg airport, walk up to your car. There is no key handover. No kiosk. No awkward “where did I put it?”. You unlock the door with your phone, start the engine, and drive off. That is the behavioral shift Volvo is putting on the table as it pilots a Bluetooth-enabled digital key. The physical key stops being the default. The car starts behaving like a shareable service.

Volvo’s plan is straightforward and bold. Replace the physical car key with a mobile app that acts as a digital key. It locks and unlocks doors and trunk. It also allows the engine to be started. Volvo intends to roll this out to a limited number of commercially available cars in 2017, with real-world testing beginning in spring 2016 via Sunfleet at Gothenburg airport in Sweden. Physical keys remain available for people who want them.

What “keyless” really changes

Most coverage of keyless cars focuses on convenience. That is real, but it is not the headline. The headline is that the key becomes software, and software is shareable, revocable, time-bound, and measurable.

Once the key is an app, a car can be:

  • Shared without meeting up. You can grant access remotely, without physically transferring anything.
  • Granted for a window of time. A key can expire after a set period, or be limited to a specific day.
  • Revoked instantly. Access can be removed without changing locks or reissuing hardware.
  • Audited. Digital access can create a clean trail of who had access, when, and potentially under what conditions.

Those are not just UX improvements. They are the primitives of “car as a platform,” where access and entitlement become programmable.

In mobility and automotive categories, making access software is the quiet foundation for scalable sharing, service models, and trust.

The strategic unlock for car sharing and new mobility behavior

Volvo is not positioning this as a novelty feature. The real-world test through Sunfleet is the tell. Keyless is a missing piece for car sharing because physical keys create friction at exactly the moment you need trust and speed.

When access is digital:

  • You can share your own car more safely, because you do not need to hide a key or coordinate handoffs.
  • You can operate fleets with lower operational drag, because key logistics shrink.
  • You can start designing new use cases that are impractical when keys are physical.

This is where brand storytelling gets interesting. Volvo is not “marketing an app.” It is marketing an engineered shift in how the product behaves. The brand moves from sheet metal and safety features to a designed system of access, trust, and mobility.

What the digital key needs to get right

Moving the key to a phone is a promise. It must hold up in the messy reality of travel days, dead batteries, and edge cases.

A credible keyless experience typically needs clear answers to:

  • What happens if the phone battery dies? (Fallback options matter, including a physical key for those who want it.)
  • How does identity and authorization work? (Who can issue a key. Who can revoke it. What is the recovery path.)
  • How secure is the handoff? (Bluetooth is convenient. It also raises expectations around encryption, pairing, and spoofing resistance.)
  • How does it work for families and multi-driver households? (Multiple keys, multiple devices, and different permissions.)
  • How does it behave when connectivity is weak? (Airports and parking structures are not always friendly environments.)

None of these are reasons to avoid keyless. They are simply the requirements for turning a headline into trust.

The marketing lesson hiding inside the engineering

This is a strong pattern in modern innovation storytelling. A brand earns attention when the innovation is tangible and legible. Not “we are digital.” Instead, “a thing you used to do physically becomes software, and your behavior changes.”

In Volvo’s case, the narrative is easy to grasp:

  • The key becomes an app.
  • Access becomes shareable.
  • Mobility becomes more flexible.

That is the kind of product story that travels well. It is engineering that people can feel.


A few fast answers before you act

What is a digital car key?

A digital car key is a phone-based key that can replace the physical key for core actions like locking, unlocking, and starting the car.

Why does keyless matter beyond convenience?

Because access becomes programmable. You can share it, time-limit it, revoke it, and potentially audit it. That changes how ownership and sharing can work.

What is Volvo actually proposing here?

A Bluetooth-enabled app that replaces the physical key, with a real-world test through Sunfleet at Gothenburg airport, and a limited rollout planned for 2017. Physical keys remain available.

What is the immediate business implication for mobility services?

Lower friction. Less operational overhead around key handling. More flexible sharing models for fleets and individuals.

What must be true for this to feel trustworthy?

Clear fallbacks and recovery paths, secure authorization and revocation, and a user experience that holds up in real-life edge cases like dead batteries and poor connectivity.