The power and simplicity of Apple Maps is available in your car. CarPlay can predict where you’re going using addresses from your , text messages, contacts, and calendars. And with the detailed city experience, you can explore cities with unprecedented detail for roads, neighborhoods, trees, buildings, and more. Visit amazing 3D landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge in both the day and dark mode maps. One‑tap access to your go‑to and must‑see destinations also helps you find more to see and do when you get there — whether you’re searching for points of interest, driving to a favorite restaurant, or looking for nearby gas stations.
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You can send audio messages with Siri on iOS and CarPlay, so you
never have to look at your iPhone while driving. And you can have Siri announce your incoming messages, then simply speak to reply. You can
also ask Siri to share your ETA with someone from your contacts list while navigating with Apple Maps, to help keep everyone who needs to know
in the know.
Access all your content from your Apple Music subscription and additional audio apps using your car’s built‑in controls. Search by artist, album, or song. See what’s playing and what’s up next. You can ask Siri to play your favorite song by Arcade Fire, act as your personal DJ, or stream one of
more than 100,000 live radio stations — and let everyone in the car add to what's playing with SharePlay. And CarPlay includes support for Spatial Audio and Dolby Atmos — so automakers can create more immersive sound experiences in their vehicles.
The Calendar app gives you a quick, simple view of the day ahead
while you’re on the go. And if you have a meeting, you can just tap to get directions or dial in, using your car’s speakers and microphones to keep
your hands on the wheel and eyes on the road.
This next generation of CarPlay is the ultimate iPhone experience for your car. It provides content for all the driver’s screens including the instrument cluster. This ensures a cohesive design experience that is the very best of your car and your iPhone — with designs for each automaker that express your vehicle’s character and brand. Vehicle functions like radio and temperature controls are handled right from CarPlay. And personalization options ranging from widgets to selecting curated gauge cluster designs make it unique to the driver.
CarPlay supports other apps on your iPhone — like your favorite audio, messaging, and voice apps, along with apps in categories like third-party parking, EV charging, quick food ordering, fueling, and driving task apps. Apps developed by car manufacturers are also supported, so you can control more of your car’s features without ever leaving CarPlay. You can personalize your experience by rearranging exactly how your apps appear in CarPlay through settings on your iPhone. And app developers have access to a variety of tools and templates that enable them to provide smarter, safer ways to use iPhone in the car.
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Thanks for reply - that’s great info about the usefulness of Carplay - when it works. My query was really about how it works via bluetooth, Wifi and hotspot. It seems that a bluetooth connection must initially be established between the and the head unit. Car play must then somehow run via Wifi as the bluetooth connection between the and the head unit switches off once Carplay launches on the Android Head Unit screen. But, when in my driveway, the itself connects to the internet via an automatic wi-fi connection to my home modem. So, with Bluetooth gone off, how is the Head unit simultaneously connecting to Apple Music for example?
When I drive away from home, my no longer connects to the internet via my home modem and defaults to my mobile service provider’s internet connection. So how then does Wi-fi apply? Is this a separate Wi-fi connection whereby the operates as a sort of modem for the Head Unit to connect to the internet?
And where does “Hotspot” come into the picture. Is the Head Unit connecting to the via the ’s Hotspot? So must this be turned on too?
And why might my screen be showing Apple Music but be playing music from my original car radio or CD player instead?
Thanks to anyone who can explain.
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