Unless you've been living under a pile of discarded iPhone
3GSs, you'll know by now that Apple's new iPhone
5 is out of the bag. But is it good news for car owners?
Here's everything you need to know about using the new
iPhone 5 in your car.
Dock connector
One of the big changes with iPhone 5 is the dock connector.
Out goes the old 30-pin item that's been around since 2003. In comes the new Lightning
port.
Apple has been quick to point out that it has come up with
an adapter to allow the new handset to work with old 30-pin sockets. It even
showed an iPhone 5 hooked up to an Audi during the keynote launch presentation.
But here's the problem. Some cars hook into the 30-pin's
analogue audio and video outputs, including some BMW and MINI models, for
instance. But Lightning is a digital interface.
Fortunately, the Apple Lightning to 30-pin adapter (yours
for £25) does allow for analogue audio output, but not analogue video. So
features such as iPod out on MINI Connected will be permanently borked unless
someone makes an adapter that converts video as well.
Bigger screen
The old iPhone's 3.5-inch screen ensured maximum
portability. But it's pretty scrawny in an in-car context.
The new iPhone 5 has a bigger 4-inch, 16:9 screen with an
even higher resolution 1,136 x 640 pixel screen. The latter won't help much
with in-car viewing distances.
But the larger four-inch diagonal can only be good if you
plan to slip it into a dock and use it for things like navigation. And on that
very note...
Adios to Google maps
Google maps is a gonner with fresh installs of iOS 6 and the
iPhone 5. In comes Apple's own mapping app, with data supplied by TomTom.
That should be a very good thing for car drivers as TomTom
is one of, if notthe, leading sat nav makers for the auto industry. For
starters, you now get turn-by-turn navigation as standard in an iPhone.
You'll also get really detailed traffic info, thanks in part
to crowd-sourced data from Waze. Add in the larger 4-inch screen and you've got
what should be a great in-car sat nav.
Siri voice control
This one isn't actually iPhone 5 specific. But it's a
feature that's rolling out as the iPhone 5 arrives. Siri is coming to cars.
Several manufacturers including Audi, BMW, Toyota and Jaguar
will be including voice-command buttons on steering wheels to activate Siri on
synced iPhone handsets.
You'll get full Siri voice control functionality using the
car's integrated mics and speakers. Since Siri is one of the better
voice-recognition solutions on the market – and generally better than the
efforts most car manufacturers have come up with – this is a good thing.
Do not disturb
Gadget-related driver distraction is becoming a major safety
headache, as the social networking-obsessed attempt to text and tweet from
behind the wheel.Will power would seem the obvious solution. Back in the real
world, a phone that isn't constantly pinging you with tempting notification
noises would help.
That's where the new Do Not Disturb feature comes in. It
uses the iPhone 5's accelerometer and GPS features to figure out when car and
driver are on the move and slips into minimum-distraction mode, silencing
alerts and keeping the screen blank.
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