If your family road trip sounds like four different soundtracks fighting for cabin airspace, Harman thinks it has a fix.
The Samsung-owned automotive tech supplier has introduced Ready StreamShare, a new in-car audio and communication system designed for what it calls the modern “multi-user” cabin, where everyone brings a phone, everyone wants their own content, and no one wants to miss a message from the driver.
The basic idea is simple: stop treating the car as a one-source stereo. Ready StreamShare uses a central in-vehicle connection hub that can coordinate audio and conversations for up to four passengers at once, rather than forcing everyone to follow the driver’s playlist.
Harman said passengers pair their phones to the hub and then choose how they want to listen. Each person can stay in a private “zone” using Harman-supplied ultra-low-latency headphones, or hop into someone else’s stream for shared playback.
Think of it as a cabin that can behave like separate rooms, without actually putting anyone in a separate room.
The more interesting trick is what happens when people are wearing headphones and the driver needs to speak.
Ready StreamShare lets passengers switch from media to hands-free cabin conversation without removing their headphones.
There is also a Driver Announcement function that can pause active streams so everyone hears the important bit, whether that is “we’re stopping for food” or “please stop kicking the seat”.
Under the hood, Harman said it relies on its Wireless Audio Ultra-Low-Latency streaming technology to keep sound and speech feeling natural, with minimal delay.
Harman is pitching Ready StreamShare as a scalable building block for carmakers, saying it can be integrated into existing cabin systems and extended over time.
Future use cases it floated include connecting to external Bluetooth speakers at campsites or tailgates, and even pairing with accessories such as smart car seats that could stream lullabies or white noise.
In other words, the cabin is no longer just where you sit. It is becoming the place where your family’s digital habits move in, too.
















