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Driver stranded after connected rental car can’t call home, Ars Technica

Driver stranded after connected rental car can’t call home, Ars Technica

      connect this –

             

Tech reporter from The Guardian gets stuck in the boonies by the Internet of Things

      

      

        

Smith Collection / Gado / Getty Images

today in sharing economy struggles: our app powered car rental lost cell service on the side of a mountain in rural California and now I live here I guess pic.twitter.com/XoqqMpEwdN

– Kari Paul (@kari_paul) (February) ,

Adding insult to injury, Paul’s cellphone was not similarly troubled by the remote location, allowing her to express her frustration, but also to talk to GIG’s customer service to try and get the car back in motion. At first, the company plan was to send a tow truck to tow the Prius a few miles closer to civilization, but that would be too easy. It appears GIG’s customer service unhelpfully suggested Paul and her companion spend the night sleeping in the car and trying to start the car again the next morning. Instead, after a six-hour wait and not one but two tow trucks — the second of which Paul called herself — plus (!) calls to GIG, the problem was finally solved in the early hours of Monday morning.

six hours, two tow trucks, and calls to customer service later apparently it was a software issue and the car needed to be rebooted before we could use it @ internetofshit

pic.twitter.com/LZBZQwRJk8

– Kari Paul (@kari_paul) (February) ,

In fairness to GIG, on its website the company does explain that users can order an RFID card to use to lock or unlock the car in areas of poor cell service, although that isn’t entirely compatible with the ability to “sign up instantly” and rent a car on the spot. It also appears to be a different approach than that taken by Car2Go (now known as Share Now), the now-defunct car-sharing service from Daimler that filled cities like Seattle and Washington, DC with blue-and-white Smart cars. Those vehicles were geofenced to particular cities and also needed cellular reception to start a trip. But they included the option to turn the car off while still keeping the rental running, therefore only requiring the key to unlock them and turn them back on.

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