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What is Apple car play?
It’s Apple’s factory-developed operating system for the infotainment screens that have become central to motoring life these days. Increasingly installed in new cars by a wide range of manufacturers, with CarPlay Apple aims to give iPhone users the best possible features and performance when connecting their smartphones to their car for driving. It does this by ‘mirroring’ key iPhone apps and features on the car’s own dashboard display and allowing you to control those features using the car’s touchscreen, steering wheel controls or voice recognition. On some models, wireless Apple CarPlay functionality is also now available so you can connect your phone to your car without a cable.
As well as making phone calls, messaging and looking up contacts, CarPlay means you can access your Apple Music playlists and other music providers like Spotify, or navigate via Apple’s mapping system or using third-party services like Waze. Interestingly, and perhaps predictably given the big touchscreens and fantastic graphic capability of screens now fitted to many cars, lots of users search for CarPlay games… there aren’t any, due to equally predictable safety concerns!
The latest CarPlay upgrade
The biggest and most obvious change to CarPlay in iOS 13 is a new dashboard screen that’s configurable with your favourite apps. While previously you had to flip between apps on different screens to operate them, you can now see an apps menu alongside a navigation window on the left side of the screen, while the right side gives you audio controls and Siri suggestions based on navigation choices or apps you typically use while driving. This improved access to core features allows you to focus more on the road and less on the screen.
CarPlay also works with Apple’s AI assistant Siri, but while Siri operations used to take over the whole CarPlay screen, the latest update allows Siri to work while other features are still displayed – for instance you needn’t lose sight of your navigation screen when ‘asking Siri’.
The Apple Music CarPlay screen has also been overhauled, with the intention of making it easier to find your playlists and new music recommendations, as well as providing more emphasis on album cover imagery.
The latest CarPlay calendar feature now allows you to see dates in your diary and scroll through entries on screen, and there’s a new Light Mode screen theme that makes the CarPlay interface look less moody, and work better in bright ambient light.
One other big advantage of the latest CarPlay upgrade is that it no longer freezes your phone when it’s hooked up to the car. You – or a passenger – can now scroll through iPhone features on the handset without interrupting the CarPlay interface and what’s displayed on the dashboard screen.
Very easy to connect Apple CarPlay
Using CarPlay is pretty effortless and it connects your iPhone (or iPad/iPod)to your car in an instant - simply plug it into the USB socket (although some car makers are now starting to offer wireless CarPlay connections), follow the brief on-screen instructions asking you to unlock your phone to permit CarPlay to access it, and you're ready to roll. And you only need to do this once - your iPhone will log the connection you've made to CarPlay on your car, so that the next time you connect, it will start working automatically.
When you connect CarPlay, the car's infotainment screen shows a menu of CarPlay-compatible apps on your iPhone. This includes pre-installed iPhone apps such as the Phone, Music, Maps, Messaging, Audiobooks and Podcasts, while third-party apps such as WhatsApp and radio players can also be accessed via the touchscreen, a car's multifunction steering wheel or via voice control.
This is far easier to do than trying to use your iPhone while driving, which of course is an offence that's punishable by a fine and points on your licence, because it's a major safety risk.
Apple Maps
One of the main highlights of CarPlay is its use of Apple Maps. Apple installs the Map app as standard on all iPhone and iPad devices, and as it's fully CarPlay compatible, it means you can have sat-nav in your car for the fraction of the cost of factory-fitted nav systems. It displays turn-by-turn directions on your car’s infotainment screen, and offers the full range of location search and destination functions that a conventional nav system offers. In fact, some carmakers are already dropping the option of sat-nav on some CarPlay-equipped cars, and it's likely that built-in sat-nav could become obsolete in a few years.
Apple Maps is able to suggest landmarks along a route, show predicted traffic levels and live traffic information when network coverage allows, and can also reroute you if necessary. The only downside to Apple Maps is that it relies on your iPhone's network coverage and data allowance or a wi-fi connection to update the map data when you're on the move. That means if you lose your signal for any length of time, you could be left with a dot on the screen representing you and your car, and a blank grid instead of a map of your surroundings.
Apple Siri
Not all cars come with voice control, but iPhones are fitted with the Siri voice assistant as standard, and this adds user-friendly touches when used with CarPlay. It works in conjunction with messaging apps and can read out text messages over the car's speakers. What's more, you can dictate messages to Siri to send to contacts. The effectiveness of this depends on how refined your car is, because background noise can hamper Siri's ability to transcribe what you say.
The other downside to messaging is that Siri cannot handle abbreviations, emojis and picture messages. Often it will read everything literally and describe emojis, which can sound a bit odd. You can also use Siri to navigate through your Music library, by selecting playlists, podcast and radio apps.
(with Inputs from Autoexpress)
It’s Apple’s factory-developed operating system for the infotainment screens that have become central to motoring life these days. Increasingly installed in new cars by a wide range of manufacturers, with CarPlay Apple aims to give iPhone users the best possible features and performance when connecting their smartphones to their car for driving. It does this by ‘mirroring’ key iPhone apps and features on the car’s own dashboard display and allowing you to control those features using the car’s touchscreen, steering wheel controls or voice recognition. On some models, wireless Apple CarPlay functionality is also now available so you can connect your phone to your car without a cable.
As well as making phone calls, messaging and looking up contacts, CarPlay means you can access your Apple Music playlists and other music providers like Spotify, or navigate via Apple’s mapping system or using third-party services like Waze. Interestingly, and perhaps predictably given the big touchscreens and fantastic graphic capability of screens now fitted to many cars, lots of users search for CarPlay games… there aren’t any, due to equally predictable safety concerns!
The latest CarPlay upgrade
The biggest and most obvious change to CarPlay in iOS 13 is a new dashboard screen that’s configurable with your favourite apps. While previously you had to flip between apps on different screens to operate them, you can now see an apps menu alongside a navigation window on the left side of the screen, while the right side gives you audio controls and Siri suggestions based on navigation choices or apps you typically use while driving. This improved access to core features allows you to focus more on the road and less on the screen.
CarPlay also works with Apple’s AI assistant Siri, but while Siri operations used to take over the whole CarPlay screen, the latest update allows Siri to work while other features are still displayed – for instance you needn’t lose sight of your navigation screen when ‘asking Siri’.
The Apple Music CarPlay screen has also been overhauled, with the intention of making it easier to find your playlists and new music recommendations, as well as providing more emphasis on album cover imagery.
The latest CarPlay calendar feature now allows you to see dates in your diary and scroll through entries on screen, and there’s a new Light Mode screen theme that makes the CarPlay interface look less moody, and work better in bright ambient light.
One other big advantage of the latest CarPlay upgrade is that it no longer freezes your phone when it’s hooked up to the car. You – or a passenger – can now scroll through iPhone features on the handset without interrupting the CarPlay interface and what’s displayed on the dashboard screen.
Very easy to connect Apple CarPlay
Using CarPlay is pretty effortless and it connects your iPhone (or iPad/iPod)to your car in an instant - simply plug it into the USB socket (although some car makers are now starting to offer wireless CarPlay connections), follow the brief on-screen instructions asking you to unlock your phone to permit CarPlay to access it, and you're ready to roll. And you only need to do this once - your iPhone will log the connection you've made to CarPlay on your car, so that the next time you connect, it will start working automatically.
When you connect CarPlay, the car's infotainment screen shows a menu of CarPlay-compatible apps on your iPhone. This includes pre-installed iPhone apps such as the Phone, Music, Maps, Messaging, Audiobooks and Podcasts, while third-party apps such as WhatsApp and radio players can also be accessed via the touchscreen, a car's multifunction steering wheel or via voice control.
This is far easier to do than trying to use your iPhone while driving, which of course is an offence that's punishable by a fine and points on your licence, because it's a major safety risk.
Apple Maps
One of the main highlights of CarPlay is its use of Apple Maps. Apple installs the Map app as standard on all iPhone and iPad devices, and as it's fully CarPlay compatible, it means you can have sat-nav in your car for the fraction of the cost of factory-fitted nav systems. It displays turn-by-turn directions on your car’s infotainment screen, and offers the full range of location search and destination functions that a conventional nav system offers. In fact, some carmakers are already dropping the option of sat-nav on some CarPlay-equipped cars, and it's likely that built-in sat-nav could become obsolete in a few years.
Apple Maps is able to suggest landmarks along a route, show predicted traffic levels and live traffic information when network coverage allows, and can also reroute you if necessary. The only downside to Apple Maps is that it relies on your iPhone's network coverage and data allowance or a wi-fi connection to update the map data when you're on the move. That means if you lose your signal for any length of time, you could be left with a dot on the screen representing you and your car, and a blank grid instead of a map of your surroundings.
Apple Siri
Not all cars come with voice control, but iPhones are fitted with the Siri voice assistant as standard, and this adds user-friendly touches when used with CarPlay. It works in conjunction with messaging apps and can read out text messages over the car's speakers. What's more, you can dictate messages to Siri to send to contacts. The effectiveness of this depends on how refined your car is, because background noise can hamper Siri's ability to transcribe what you say.
The other downside to messaging is that Siri cannot handle abbreviations, emojis and picture messages. Often it will read everything literally and describe emojis, which can sound a bit odd. You can also use Siri to navigate through your Music library, by selecting playlists, podcast and radio apps.
(with Inputs from Autoexpress)