Houston Chronicle Sunday

Apple CarPlay goes the distance against Bluetooth system

- bob@workingsma­rter formacuser­s.com

When I bought my Subaru Legacy in 2016, Apple’s CarPlay wasn’t available for it, even as an option. My car has Bluetooth, which lets me listen to music or podcasts, hear turn-by-turn navigation instructio­ns and make and receive phone calls handsfree through the car stereo.

I was satisfied with Bluetooth and the convenienc­e it provided. Until the other day, when my wife and I traded in her dying 2005 Jaguar for a 2018 Subaru Impreza. What can I say? She liked my Legacy a lot and decided her next car would be a Subaru, too.

By 2018, CarPlay had become standard equipment on most Subarus, so our new (to us) car has CarPlay. And, after only a few hours of using it, I’m totally jealous.

Before I get into why I like CarPlay better than Bluetooth, let me tell you what CarPlay is and what it

does. Introduced by Apple in 2014, CarPlay enables your car’s touchscree­n and audio system to act as a display and controller for your iPhone 5 or later running iOS 7.1 or later.

The first thing to note is that Bluetooth is wireless and CarPlay is not, at least not in most cars today. You have to connect your iPhone via USB-to-Lightning cable. Wireless CarPlay is coming, but it’s new and only available on a handful of high-end 2019 and 2020 car models so far.

Wired or wireless, CarPlay is fantastic. It uses the much bigger touchscree­n in the Impreza’s dash to display a customized-forthe-car rendition of your iPhone screen. The icons are big and easy to tap, the text is large and easy to read and everything responds to voice commands you can activate via a button on the steering wheel.

CarPlay doesn’t work with every app, only those designed for CarPlay. But that includes most of the apps I want while driving including Apple’s Maps, Music, Podcasts, Audiobooks and others, as well as third-party apps such as Spotify, Audible, NPR One, Google Maps, Overcast, Sirius XM Radio, Tidal, MLB At Bat and more.

One thing I really love is having giant “fast-forward 30 seconds” and “rewind 30 seconds” buttons on the screen for podcasts and audiobooks. Another thing I love is having the Maps app displayed on my dashboard screen at four times the size of my iPhone.

Finally, CarPlay uses Siri to help you keep your eyes on the road. She’ll read your text messages aloud, and let you dictate your reply. She can inform you of missed calls, play back your voicemails and much more.

There is one more thing: Third-party CarPlay system can be installed in many cars, but they aren’t cheap. Expect to pay at least $400 (wired) or $600 (wireless) to have a CarPlay system installed.

Having experience­d CarPlay up close and personal, I’ll never buy another vehicle without it and I’m considerin­g an aftermarke­t system for my Legacy. Yes, it’s that good.

 ?? Courtesy ?? Giant-sized display is a big plus for the Apple CarPlay system.
Courtesy Giant-sized display is a big plus for the Apple CarPlay system.
 ??  ?? BOB LEVITUS
BOB LEVITUS

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