Hyundai has mastered the Japanese art of first launching, then  improving on, technology like that from your competitors. Such is the  case with their Blue Link telematics system, which will offer features that OnStar  users will be intimately familiar with, but include additional  functions aimed directly at Generation Y. Lock yourself out of your new Hyundai Sonata,  and a call to their hotline will quickly unlock your doors. Need  roadside assistance? Help is just the push of a button away. Want  turn-by-turn navigation? A Hyundai Blue Link operator will be happy to  help you, and just like OnStar, Blue Link provides automated emergency  response in the event of a crash. It will also immobilize your car if  stolen, just like GM’s telematics system.
Hyundai  is clearly aiming Blue Link at the “connected generation”, since the  feature set doesn’t stop there. Location sharing will broadcast your  location to members of your social network, and voice text messaging  will ensure that Hyundai drivers aren’t out of touch when behind the wheel.  Nanny features will tell you when your car’s been driven outside of a  prescribed region by a valet or family member, and will also advise you  if a speed threshold has been exceeded.
There’s plenty more features to be had in Blue Link (including some that will raise eyebrows at the NHTSA), but you get the idea: Hyundai has copied OnStar, then found ways to make it better.
Now we know what the service will cost, and, as expected, it  undercuts OnStar  by offering more features for less money. Hyundai’s  basic service, called “Assurance,” includes automatic collision  notification, SOS emergency assistance, enhanced roadside assistance and  a monthly vehicle report, for an annual fee of $79.  There’s no  comparable OnStar package, since their entry-level Safe & Sound  package includes a broader feature set.
Next up from Hyundai is the  Assurance & Essentials package,  which starts with the Assurance package and includes location sharing,  voice text messaging, a smartphone app, remote door locking and  unlocking, remote horn and lights, remote vehicle start, a service  scheduling feature, remote diagnostics, maintenance alert, monthly  vehicle diagnostic report, valet alert, geo-fence, speed alert, curfew  (a time based alert), stolen vehicle recovery, panic notification and  alarm notification, all for an annual fee of $179. This is comparable to  OnStar’s Safe & Sound package ($199 annually), but includes  Generation-Y focused features (like location sharing and voice texting)  that OnStar simply doesn’t offer.
On the high end, Hyundai owners can opt for the Assurance, Essentials  & Guidance package, which adds turn-by-turn navigation, POI search  by voice, traffic updates, gas locator with pricing, restaurant ratings  and weather, for an annual fee of $279.  OnStar’s Directions &  Connections package, their most comparable, charges $299 annually.
Buy a new Blue Link-equipped Hyundai and you get the Assurance  package at no charge for six months. You also get the Essentials and  Guidance packages free, but only for ninety days. Opt for an annual  contract in your first 30 days of ownership, and Hyundai will  double  the length of your free Blue Link services. Like OnStar, there are also discounts available for multi-year contracts.
If you want more details on Hyundai’s Blue Link services, check out Nelson Ireson's comprehensive write up on AllCarTech. Look for Blue Link to be introduced on the 2012 Hyundai Sonata, followed by the 2012 Hyundai Veloster.
[Hyundai, via All Car Tech]

 
 
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