Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ; additional terms may apply. Combined with the high Australian dollar, high wages, import barriers in Asia, and the refusal of further government subsidies, Australia finds itself today at the end of car manufacturing. Consumers today use their cars as all-purpose vehicles, whether they are commuting alone to work or taking the whole family to the beach. This was enough to convince Nissan to end car making in Australia and the Japanese automaker hit the exit door in 1992, but the tariffs have been reduced further, with the current figure standing at just 5{a775f47e5e8fab0076d6dd0f2239d5f40a1e14262a4fe67b7afc4fe8e63c40b1}.
The survey of 3,700 connected car owners in Europe shows there is clear excitement about connected cars, in particular navigation, driver assistance and in-car entertainment, with almost six in 10 respondents (59{a775f47e5e8fab0076d6dd0f2239d5f40a1e14262a4fe67b7afc4fe8e63c40b1}) saying that connected features influenced their choice of vehicle and 32{a775f47e5e8fab0076d6dd0f2239d5f40a1e14262a4fe67b7afc4fe8e63c40b1} saying it was an …