Skip to main content

Now you don't have to buy a fancy new car just to get Android Auto

Android Auto
Android Auto began as Google’s answer to Apple’s CarPlay: in-car entertainment software that would play nicely with your phone. It provided seamless access to car-optimized apps like Google Play Music, Maps, Pandora, and useful real-time information like traffic incidents and weather. Since Android Auto’s launch nearly a year ago, though, it has been relegated to expensive new cars. But all that changed on Monday when Google announced a major update for Android Auto, version 2.0, that enables the in-car entertainment system on supported Android devices and tablets.

It is a boon for folks with older rides. Previously, you could only get Android Auto in one of two expensive ways: buying a new car that had it built into the factory stereo, or buying and installing a pricey head unit yourself. “[We] know there are millions of older cars on the road that are not compatible with Android Auto, and many don’t have a screen at all,” Gerhard Schobbe, Android Auto’s project manager, wrote in a blog post. “We wanted to bring the same connected experience to these drivers too.”

The new Android Auto client, which supports phones running Android 5.0 or newer, provides access to much the same interface as the one on high-end head units. It is hardware agnostic, Google said, meaning it will work regardless of whether or not you have a certain car display or mount. It launches automatically when your phone is paired to your car via Bluetooth. It will include enhanced hands-free voice commands, which include improved accessing features in Google Maps, music, and messaging apps, that Google said will launch in the coming weeks.

For the uninitiated, the Android Auto experience centers around the home screen, which shows three cards containing the most relevant bits of information at any given moment. If you receive a phone call or text, you will see the content of the message. If there is a road closure ahead, you will see detour details. And if there is inclement weather projected for your trip, you will receive an alert.

aav_home_day_framed_q5jr89i-width-2000

Apps are the other half of Android Auto’s equation and the platform is practically overflowing with them. They are informally divided into categories. Navigation apps include Maps, which provides turn-by-turn directions with distances, ETA to destinations, voice prompts, and pop-up notifications about upcoming lane switches and turns. Among the music apps are Google Play Music, Spotify, iHeart Radio, TuneIn, Joyride, Stitcher, podcast player Pocket Casts, and NPR One, all of which show album artwork and playback controls. Communication apps comprise Android Auto’s built-in messaging client, which let you send texts and initiate calls with voice. Voice apps — principally Google’s autonomous assistant, Google Now — provide navigational assistance, allowing you to launch apps, begin music playlists, pull up directions, get the local temperature, and even learn about the elevation of nearby geographic features all by shouting commands.

Android Auto on any old smartphone or tablet will not necessarily deliver the same experience as an integrated head unit. Hyundai, for instance, recently introduced MyHundai, an Android Auto app that provides access to Hyundai Roadside Assistance, monthly vehicle reports, maintenance alerts, and a Valet mode that notifies you if your car exits a pre-determined boundary. But it provides a pretty good approximation of the experience on head units and new cars. Considering it is free, perhaps that is good enough.

Google said more than 200 new car models from 50 brands now support Android Auto. The most recent to climb aboard include, Kia, which recently added Android Auto as a free software update on cars spanning model years 2014 through 2017, and Hyundai, which rolled out the platform as part of an update for certain models of the carmaker’s Genesis, Elantra GT and Tucson, and Santa Fe.

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Android Auto will now tell you if your USB cable is faulty
Android Auto in a car.

Broken USB cables cause big problems for anyone trying to use a wired connection between their phone and their car, but the latest Android Auto update is looking to reduce that frustration. With the rollout of the 7.5.121104 update, Android Auto is able to run diagnostic checks of any cable connected to an Android device.

This could drastically reduce the number of connection issues that users experience when using wired connections, as they'll be able to know if the problem they're experiencing is tied to their cable. Up to this point, it's been tricky to know for certain if a USB cable is faulty on the fly, but the diagnostic test that Android Auto can run will tell users instantly if their phones are properly sending/receiving data through a cable.

Read more
You probably won’t get Android 12’s coolest feature when it rolls out
Android 12 display screens. Credits: Android official.

With Android 12, Google debuted a whole new design language for the operating system. "Instead of Google Blue, we imagined Material You," the company said at Google I/O 2021. For a whole lot of Android 12 upgraders though, the Google blues is exactly what they're going to get when Android 12 hits.

This week, Samsung finally announced and distributed the beta for One UI 4, its take on Android 12. Shortly after, Oppo announced ColorOS 12, its own spin on Android 12. Alongside Nokia's own Android 12 Beta, these releases tell us what to expect (and what not to expect) from Android 12 when it hits the vast majority of Android phones as it rolls out through the next year.

Read more
Google Photos now shows more of the photos you want, fewer of the ones you don’t
Google Photos

Google detailed a selection of feature updates to Google Photos during the Google I/O 2021 keynote presentation, starting with an incredible statistic: There are 4 trillion photos and videos stored in Google Photos, an astonishing number, but the vast majority are never viewed.

Google is using A.I. to make sure the memories you’ve made and stored in Google Photos don’t get forgotten. It begins with an approach it calls Little Patterns. When it finds three or more photos that look similar, including shapes and colors, machine learning puts them together into a single story. Google showed a demonstration where it identified someone wearing a distinctive orange backpack, which was featured in multiple photos of a hiking tour, that was ready to be collected into a new story.

Read more