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More cars could get What3words address tech with Here navigation deal

Carmakers like GM, Ford and Volkswagen get the option to let drivers use three-word address labels like "damage.petal.large."

Stephen Shankland Former Principal Writer
Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about processors, digital photography, AI, quantum computing, computer science, materials science, supercomputers, drones, browsers, 3D printing, USB, and new computing technology in general. He has a soft spot in his heart for standards groups and I/O interfaces. His first big scoop was about radioactive cat poop.
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Stephen Shankland
2 min read
What3words car navigation

What3words navigation technology could arrive in many more cars through a deal with mapping company Here.

What3words

Some Mercedes cars have the What3words technology built in, letting you speak or type three words to pinpoint a 10x10 foot location in its navigation system, but a lot more cars soon could get similar technology. The London company announced a deal that will let navigation system maker Here incorporate the technology.

Here navigation technology is used in car brands including , , , Honda , , Nissan , and Volkswagen , built into the dashboards of about 150 million vehicles worldwide. With the deal, carmakers can use What3words technology in new cars and, if they choose, existing ones through software updates, What3words and Here said Thursday.

What3words divides the world's surface into 57 trillion patches and assigns a three-word address label to each -- including many locations that don't have a street address. For example, the parking lot pay station at Cerrillos Hills State Park in New Mexico is located at perfecting.bleary.violins, and the famously sculpted "Wave" rock in Vermillion Cliffs National Monument wilderness is at renovating.veteran.blossom.

The technology isn't integrated with online mapping tools like Google or Apple maps, but it illustrates how profoundly ages-old mapping technology is changing. What3words is catching on with emergency services, some Airbnb hosts, and countries like the Ivory Coast that need a modernized address system. It doesn't get confused between 14th Street and 14th Avenue in San Francisco.

Google has an alternative technology called Plus Codes that's built into Google Maps , and of course you can already use latitude-longitude coordinates. But What3words believes its approach is better since it's easier to pronounce, understand, speak or type some words than a lot of numerals or a string of alphanumeric characters.

It's not yet clear how widely What3words will be used in Here-powered navigation systems. But for those cars that get it, drivers will be able "to navigate easily in dense, urban environments with nonstandard addressing schemes or seamlessly get to any location, be it a local pub or a trailhead," said Jørgen Behrens, Here's chief product officer, in a statement.

Watch this: This startup gives an easy-to-remember name to each spot on Earth