Apple CarPlay Will Now Support Third-Party Navigation and Mapping Apps (techcrunch.com)
Apple today announced that it will now let third-party navigation and mapping apps work with CarPlay starting with iOS 12. "Up to now, Apple only allowed its own mapping app, Maps, to work over CarPlay, but now you can use Waze, Google Maps, Here, or whatever other app you might want to use to get from A to B," reports TechCrunch. From the report: The change marks a big shift for Apple, which is well known for favoring its own native apps and generally a more tightly controlled ecosystem on iOS and across devices. But Maps hasn't been the most popular mapping app by some measure, even for users of iOS. This is in a sense is a tacit acknowledgement that iPhone owners are using a wide variety of other services, and so to get CarPlay used more, this needed to be enabled. It's not clear why Apple didn't extend third-party support for other mapping and navigation apps until now. Perhaps it was to sweeten the deal for more people to use its own Maps app.
So if an iphone with IOS12 connects to any car with an existing carplay feature, will Google maps work?
Or will the car firmware need to be updated also?
TFA ain't not don't say nuffink bout dat.
Many use waze while driving. Much different features than apple maps.
Do people not remember the joys that Apple Maps provides us with? ;)
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
Break out the sarsaparilla!
apples mediocre hardware has to be supported by another companies great software.
No soup for them. They killed their car apps (Garmin and Navigon brands), and while doing one last update for GDPR, someone fat-fingered away the actual speed limit display. So the only Garmin automotive app left in customers' hands is a broken one.
Crappls sucks ass, Tim Cocksucker sucked off all good stuff.
Wow! What an erudite post.
Exactly what I have come to expect from Slashtard AC Apple Haters.
FINALLY!!!!
Now CarPlay is finally worth getting!!! THANK YOU, Apple!!
Better slashtard ac than Tim Cock's shill.
My hope is that Carplay, Android Auto and Mirrorlink merge into an interoperable standard. It would be awfully nice if my choice of car (or at least the head-end) did not force me into a particular phone model.
No one forces you here.
We all have smartphones already. Their maps are constantly up to date. Why would I want to use outdated maps in my vehicle? The importance of the vehicle's entertainment system is lessening (is that a word?). Phones and tablets have overtaken the pricey navigation and DVD systems.
"A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
This is good news. Now, if I could get CarPlay to not crash every two minutes (seriously, every two minutes, almost like clockwork) I might be able to use this. It's a nice feature, and sounds better than Bluetooth (upgrade your codecs too, Apple) for audio. But it is useless if it crashes constantly.
"What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
apple admits their maps application is crap.
No one forces you here.
Who forces you here? Google?
Okay Troll.
Now if only the car companies would allow Car play to run on their infotainment systems instead of expecting us to pay and extra $600 for a crappy map program and $20 a month for 4G access. I have LTE and google maps, I just want to play on my screen without having to hack the thing apart and have wires snaking everywhere.
CarPlay in my experience is way picky about the data link between the phone and the car.
My Kenwood after-market unit had CarPlay crashes all the time until I:
* Took the battery case off the phone
* Connected with a decent quality Lightning cable
Some battery cases don't switch cleanly between charging the case and charging the phone, and the momentary hiccup seems to break CarPlay. The cheap micro-USB connector in the case might also contribute to this.
Agreed, CarPlay should not crash on transient data interruptions.
To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.