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Android Transportation Apple

GM To Offer Apple CarPlay and Android Auto API In Most 2016 Vehicles 76

Lucas123 writes: GM today announced it will offer Apple CarPlay and Android Auto mirroring APIs on 14 of its 2016 vehicles. GM's announcement follows one earlier this week by Hyundai, which said it would offer Android Auto in its Sonata Sedan this year. Some of GM's Chevrolet vehicles — such as the Malibu, Camaro and Silverado truck — use a seven-inch MyLink infotainment system; those systems will be compatible with both Android Auto and Apple CarPlay in the beginning of 2016. Those models offering the smartphone mirroring apps include the all-new 2016 Cruze compact, which will debut on June 24. Other GM vehicles use an eight-inch version of MyLink that will only be compatible with Apple CarPlay at the beginning of the new model year. While development and testing is not yet complete, Android Auto compatibility may be available on the eight-inch version of MyLink later in the 2016 model year, GM said.
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GM To Offer Apple CarPlay and Android Auto API In Most 2016 Vehicles

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  • Pist frost (Score:5, Informative)

    by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @07:03PM (#49786851)
    1) "infotainment" is not a word.
    2) People need to pay attention to what they're doing on the road and quit fucking around with cell phones and other cool whizzo shit on the dashboard.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Don't worry. Most of it will be controlled by someone else. Either by AutoAds Inc or by AutoHacker and his friends. And do you think this will be updated two years after the car has been released? Not likely. Fun times for car buyers. Or not.

    • Re:Pist frost (Score:4, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @07:51PM (#49787083) Homepage Journal

      1) Give this battle up now. The industry has moved on into the world of cutesy names long since, and you have no chance to win. Infotainment is the official, accepted term.
      2) Better infotainment systems means less fucking around with the gadgets, because the systems make it easier.

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        1) Give this battle up now. The industry has moved on into the world of cutesy names long since, and you have no chance to win. Infotainment is the official, accepted term.
        2) Better infotainment systems means less fucking around with the gadgets, because the systems make it easier.

        I accept 1, but 2 is debatable, we need to encourage people to NOT fuck around with gadgets in the car at all.

        However vendor locked "infotainment" systems need to die and die a horrible death in a fire. In car nav systems are almost always inferior to third party, updates are difficult and in many cases, expensive. Manufacturers have made a system that is obsolete in 2 years max which cannot be replaced in a vehicle that has a serviceable life of 10+ years. This needs to change.

        I cant imagine how bad

        • I accept 1, but 2 is debatable, we need to encourage people to NOT fuck around with gadgets in the car at all.

          Not gonna happen.

          I cant imagine how bad my current car, a 2002 Nissan Silvia would be if I couldn't swap out the stereo with something that knew what an MP3 was.

          That depends on whether it has a changer interface, and whether you have a changer. I have a 1997 Audi A8 with a Bose stereo with no aux input, but I can get one by slicing into the CD changer wiring and using a switch and/or relays (I have the 12V audio signal relays already, have been too busy to make the mod though) to insert my own audio source in between. Or an el cheapo (~$10) panel-mount mp3 player/bluetooth receiver from dealextreme has a line input, so it's just a matter of finding

          • by mjwx ( 966435 )

            I accept 1, but 2 is debatable, we need to encourage people to NOT fuck around with gadgets in the car at all.

            Not gonna happen.

            It will if we start taking licenses off of serial phone users.

            I'm sure 30 or 40 odd years ago they said we'd never all wear seatbelts. Now we all wear seatbelts. The same with drink driving. Some people will need to be pushed to make a change, but they'll make it.

            I cant imagine how bad my current car, a 2002 Nissan Silvia would be if I couldn't swap out the stereo with something that knew what an MP3 was.

            That depends on whether it has a changer interface, and whether you have a changer. I have a 1997 Audi A8 with a Bose stereo with no aux input, but I can get one by slicing into the CD changer wiring and using a switch and/or relays (I have the 12V audio signal relays already, have been too busy to make the mod though) to insert my own audio source in between. Or an el cheapo (~$10) panel-mount mp3 player/bluetooth receiver from dealextreme has a line input, so it's just a matter of finding some connectors which fit the board or soldering on some leads, and making a quick splice. Got a voltage regulator so it can run on 5-32V or something ridiculous like that. I might just go that route because there will be no relays to go bad ever. If the thing goes tits up it'll be easy to splice it away.

            I was mainly talking about the dash space they use. Many manufacturers no longer use the DIN standard. Getting a wiring loom/adapter is easy, you can knock one up yourself easily if you've got even a modicum of skill. The problem is if Audi start using a different shaped hole in the dash compared to VW or even another Audi then you cant simply buy an off the shelf replacement like I did with my Nissan because they'd have to be custom built to fit where the old head unit came from.

            • I was mainly talking about the dash space they use. Many manufacturers no longer use the DIN standard.

              Yeah, that includes my 1997 Audi. They billed it as an anti-theft feature, ha ha ha. The radio is coded anyway. But I'm not replacing the head unit, just hacking in an aux input. It's an 11-or-so speaker Bose so why would I dick with it?

            • by suutar ( 1860506 )

              I had to get a special shaped adaptor [amazon.com] for my 01 civic to replace the head unit. As long as there's a market for aftermarket head units there will be someone molding plastic to fill in the weird panel shapes the manufacturer chose.

        • Right... manufacturers could avoid all of this BS if they just stuck to standard head unit sizes and bezels. For whatever reason, though, they don't want to make it easy to replace a stereo -- probably to make the $5000 upgrade to the "premium" audio more compelling. Of course, once you hear that midrange, it's hard to say no. It sounds like someone's right there in the car, possibly in the trunk, quickly running out of air.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        2) Better infotainment systems means less fucking around with the gadgets, because the systems make it easier.

        You mean like moving away from touch screen devices that require all your focus to physical buttons that can be operated without ever looking down?

    • 1) "infotainment" is not a word.

      Yes it is. It has been a word for at least a decade. Just because you don't like the concept, doesn't mean the word describing it is uncromulent.

      2) People need to pay attention to what they're doing on the road and quit fucking around with cell phones and other cool whizzo shit on the dashboard.

      That is one of the problems these systems help solve. They are built into the dash, and integrated with the cars computers. So they know when you are moving, and if you are not moving, they know whether you are in "park" or just stopped at a light. They can also detect the weight in the passenger seat, so they know a second person may be using the system. It

    • by defaria ( 741527 )
      New words are invented all the time.
    • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

      "2) People need to pay attention to what they're doing on the road and quit fucking around with cell phones and other cool whizzo shit on the dashboard."
      Because trying to read a paper map and drive at the same time is so much safer...
      Sure I agree that that playing angry birds while driving is a bad plan but Things like Nav do make driving safer IMHO. For the idiots that follow nav without question and drive into a river.. Well they would have done that sooner or later anyway.

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      Pretty much my thoughts exactly. This means a potential of more distracted drivers on the road. I bought a used Viper, one of the originals, and not only is there no radio, there is no OEM slot to put a radio in. There is, also, a State law that makes distracted driving illegal. Use of this type of technology while driving may provide probable cause for a traffic stop so caution is paramount. The overreach of such laws is absurd though the intent is good (I believe). Recently a driver was stopped for eating

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @07:09PM (#49786875)

    bad bad very friggin bad.

    bring back mechanical controls, dials, switches, things that can be operated by feel and by memory, not by look-in-order-to-see-what-your-doing.

    • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

      People who think touchscreen controls are a good idea in cars have never tried driving one at forty below zero.

    • I don't know anything about Android Auto, but CarPlay supports hardware buttons and knobs. Assuming the car manufacturers know what they're doing (hahahaha) there's no reason mechanical controls can't be included in these systems.

      • FWIW, I have a '14 Cruze with a touch screen. Every interface element on screen can also be done with physical buttons and knobs.

    • I know, right? Kids these days don't even know why we call it "rolling down the windows." Give me a GPS where I have to tap in my destination by morse code using a switch from a Model M and I'll be a happy camper.

  • i ran out of analogies, and euphemisms, and things.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @07:20PM (#49786933)

    GM today announced it will offer Apple CarPlay and Android Auto mirroring APIs on 14 of its 2016 vehicles....I really thought GM made a lot more vehicles than that.

    • And they're only adding that stuff in less than 1% of the cars they're planning to make. Pathetic.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      They are doing something. CarPlay is going to make or break car companies, and the auto makers that don't have it in their cars will be out of the market, destroyed by those who do.

      Horsepower doesn't mean much in bumper/bumper traffic, so it is something that is losing its luster, especially among 20-somethings. These days, it is about amenities, features, and MPG. No CarPlay? No sale.

  • Apple made some public comment today referencing their own Apple Car ambitions, saying something about how, "cars are the ultimate mobile device"
    (something like that, I'm paraquoting.)

    Anyway, it's debatable that a platform you may spend a hour or two a day with being the "ultimate mobile device" (whereas my phone moves around with me 24/7/365.25)

    Also, what is the likelihood that Apple can out-Tesla Mr. Musk? Isn't it more likely they want to acquire Mr. Musk and his Tesla enterprise, and all the PR
    • by BasilBrush ( 643681 ) on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @11:32PM (#49788123)

      What makes you imagine Musk can make an electric car company from scratch and Apple can't? Musk is rich, but even so he nearly ran out of money, what with Tesla And SpaceX. He got so near to the brink at one stage he was going to have to pull out of one - but won some space contracts just in time.

      As well as the design chops and the desirable brand, Apple has effectively limitless amounts of money to throw at making a car.

      Yes, buying Tesla is an option, but there have been car related hires at Apple going on for some time now - if they were going to buy Tesla, you'd expect it to be before the hires.

      For the car buying public it is better that they compete. There will be more innovation, quicker that way.

      • I was considering the possibility that, as in many corporate acquisitions, there is expediency and value in simply buying a winning team over attempting to build one. Imagine the rapid scale Tesla could reach with an Apple-scale cashpile partner, and the (ahem, please forgive me for this) synergies ( I need a shower now) to be had with Tesla's battery operations.

        Maybe Apple is gathering car talent be make themselves pretty for the engagement party. In other words, to have something to bring to the tab
        • Well, it's possible. But if they did that they'd need to keep the existing car shipping, and it wouldn't make any sense to rebrand it, so it'd probably be a Beats type arrangement.

          I suspect that rather than wanting to adopt an existing design and approach, they want to start a car design from first principles.

          Big project, necessarily long time scales. But that's the nature of cars. There's no hurry, the market is not going anywhere.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      I don't think Apple wants to be in the car manufacturing business with a car of their own anymore than they want to be in the PC and smartphone manufacturing business. With consumer electronics, though, you only have to be in the design business (and only partially, since they buy a lot of technology from someone else -- AFAIK, they don't design display panels, radio chipsets, flash memory, RAM, etc).

      With cars, though, there's not really a contract manufacturer who does the assembly, you have to do that yo

  • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @08:20PM (#49787221)

    Looks to me like marketoids chasing buzzwords

    Car companies should concentrate on making cars and leave the fashionable electronics to the fashionable electronic manufacturers

    I wonder how many cars still have built-in analog cellphones? or built-in cassette players?

    The ONLY thing that should be built-in is a speaker system, tuned to the acoustics of the car, with an amplifier and aux jack

    ALL other "infotainment" devices should be separate

    • The ONLY thing that should be built-in is a speaker system, tuned to the acoustics of the car, with an amplifier and aux jack

      What you don't seem to realize is that this is the equivalent of that for connecting your smartphone to your car. If only you knew anything about the subject at hand, like about cars or automotive infotainment, you would know that these are technologies for interfacing to your phone while in your car — and that these are both major standards. That means that virtually all smartphone owners will be able to use the interface in the car, designed for automotive use, instead of the interface on their phon

      • by chihowa ( 366380 )

        What you don't seem to realize is that this is the equivalent of that for connecting your smartphone to your car.

        These are the equivalent of cars with built-in iPod docks, not aux jacks. Both of these standards are incompatible with each other, brand new, and controlled by companies that change/drop their old "standards" at the drop of a hat. In five to ten years, these systems will be just as obsolete as the cars with slots to fit a first-gen iPod, 30-pin connectors, and firewire level power output.

        Not to mention the privacy aspects of this. The sheer amount of data that Android Auto shares with apps is a creepy stal

        • [...] controlled by companies that change/drop their old "standards" at the drop of a hat.

          Yeah, but Apple makes the coolest adapters.... [youtube.com]

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          These are the equivalent of cars with built-in iPod docks, not aux jacks. Both of these standards are incompatible with each other, brand new, and controlled by companies that change/drop their old "standards" at the drop of a hat. In five to ten years, these systems will be just as obsolete as the cars with slots to fit a first-gen iPod, 30-pin connectors, and firewire level power output.

          Cars provided USB power only recently, say 10 years ago.

          Apple introduced the 30 pin dock connector 12 years ago, in 2003

          • by chihowa ( 366380 )

            The bigger worry in the end is there aren't many platforms that last over 10 years - PalmOS started in the mid 90s and was wiped out in the mid 2000's, Windows Mobile started late 90s and was wiped out in the mid 2000's. Symbian started in the 80s as EPOC and probably lasted the longest, but again, dead. Ditto say, Blackberry. There's a good possibility that say, 2020 would bring about a new platform or innovation that renders iOS and Android both obsolete.

            That was my point, though my example was subpar. The iPod dock connector lasted a while, but there were fairly new cars still sporting it when Apple switched connectors. These are very fluid "standards".

            These auto systems will likely never be updated, either, so they will work at whatever level the API was at when the car's development cycle stopped... even while Apply and Google keep the API churn going and possibly depreciate old versions of it. This is a recipe for constantly obsoleted car interfaces, ju

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Car companies should concentrate on making cars and leave the fashionable electronics to the fashionable electronic manufacturers

      So in other words... like Carplay?

      What you describe is exactly what millenials want in their cars, and it's the very reason Carplay exists. It lets them use their own smart devices and interface with the Car's audio and other systems.

      So be happy! What you asked for, exists!

    • Bluetooth is a perfectly usable universal standard. I have a car with generic bluetooth, and everything (except for stupid Apple phones) works fine with it.
    • Looks to me like marketoids chasing buzzwords

      Car companies should concentrate on making cars and leave the fashionable electronics to the fashionable electronic manufacturers

      I wonder how many cars still have built-in analog cellphones? or built-in cassette players?

      The ONLY thing that should be built-in is a speaker system, tuned to the acoustics of the car, with an amplifier and aux jack

      ALL other "infotainment" devices should be separate

      Except...closed garden = more money = fuck the consumer

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

      ALL other "infotainment" devices should be separate

      You don't want this. Ever see what the warranty is on aftermarket head units? One year - two years tops. That's because they aren't built to last, they are built to be as cheap as possible.

      OEM head units go through, minimum, one full year of electronic and environmental testing. If it's a completely new design they'll do two years of testing. These are covered by the car's warranty - which usually lasts at least three or four years, five years on some makes.

      Source - I designed test software for aftermarket

      • Yeah, and a car uint costs $1200 while a good aftermarket head unit costs about $200. That's equal to a six year warranty... ;-D
  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Wednesday May 27, 2015 @09:34PM (#49787583)
    90% of the cars on the road are single drivers, whom I really don't want to be "infotained". Especially when it's the drive they do every day while eating an egg mcmuffin and shaving.

    The only time I can see this being A Good Thing (tm) is when you and your family fly into a vacation destination, rent a car, and need to drive for an hour or 3 (my typical vacation).

    If you can't keep your SO/kids entertained for the typical 20 minute drive, then keep your distracted ass off the road I'm using to get somewhere safely.
    • There's nothing wrong with "infotainment" as long as it's audio. People have been listening to car radios without problems for many decades.

      • There's nothing wrong with "infotainment" as long as it's audio. People have been listening to car radios without problems for many decades.

        Well, actually, EVERYTHING increases the risk of accidents. And "without problems" is really an euphemism for "cars already kill thousands of people per year, so we really don't want to think real hard about what causes those >"... http://www.monash.edu.au/miri/... [monash.edu.au]

  • "We have a spare channel on the braking CANbus; we'll just patch it into that."

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