Hi all,
I thought I'd start a thread to specifically discuss Android Auto (AA) and it's use with VW's MIB II App Connect platform. I'm hoping any and all questions can be asked here so that this thread could become a point of reference for AA users.
The only thing I ask is that if possible people post their phone specifications including model and Android version. It might help weed out issues more easily!
I've tried AA on 3 phones now:
Samsung Galaxy S3 running Cyanogenmod 12.1
Forget about it. The phone lacks thew grunt and AA is completely unusable.
HTC One M7 running Cyanogenmod 12.1
Worked, but was often slow to respond, and menu items liked to disappear especially in Spotify. Too buggy to use effectively.
LG/Google Nexus 5X running Android 6.0
Works, and works well. No noticeable issues that are not problems with AA or the MIB II platforms themselves.
My experiences with AA are mainly on the music side of things. I've barely touched maps, but have made a few phone calls and have had a few text conversations with my brother which I'd say was 80% successful but no where near as easy as they should/could have been.
What do I like? I like having text messages read to me and I like being able to respond to text messages verbally. The speech recognition is pretty good, and from using it a bit more I find speaking naturally but not too fast works well. I enjoy using Spotify more than the media interface that comes standard with the unit. Using Google maps will no doubt be handy at some point (especially if my VW maps get horribly out of date), and when more apps come along I'm sure it will get better.
However! It's clearly in Beta.
Here's what I think they need to fix with Android Auto itself:
- You need to be able to select individual songs in a playlist.
- Pressing the back button should go to the start of the current track, not the start of the previous track.*
- Not being able to actually read the content of text messages*
- The voice input stops listening far too easily. If you pause at all, it'll stop listening. What you wend up with is only part of what you wanted to say.
I am aware that a lot of this is by design as depending on what country you are from only a certain amount of presses are legally allowed before the device is considered as interfering with driving. It's dumb and will be hard for Google to work around unless better voice control is implemented.
Here's what appears to be broken with Android Auto and MIB II:
- The MIB II screen is no where near as responsive as my phone screen, but AA is clearly designed for a more responsive unit. Far too often the unit does not recognise my input.
- Connection is iffy. I get better recognition if I plug my phone in before I start the car. If I plug it in after the accessories are running, it sometimes doesn't connect, or connects and disconnects several times before finally giving up or connecting. On one occasion the screen was just black and I had to un-plug and reconnect the phone for something to happen. On another occasion the entire head-unit crashed and I had no choice but to wait for it to restart. Sort of resolved. See below:
Personally I believe Android Auto has promise, and in a massive about turn I think it's a pretty good stab at it. It's worrying that even the latest and greatest hardware appears to have lag issues, and the screen sensitivity of the MIB II unit is not great.
If any of the issues I've highlighted above are unique to me, or clearly my own stupidity, then I'm all ears!
- Matt
EDIT: I'll add a table of "Good To Know" stuff:
Action |
App |
Result |
Right Head Unit Knob (turn) |
Google Maps |
Zooms map in and out |
|
Android Auto home screen |
Scrolls the activity list up and down |
VW Voice Button (press and hold) |
Anywhere in Android Auto |
Activates Google Voice |
How to properly connect to your MIB II unit:
- Remove the car from the bluetooth settings on the phone.
- Remove the phone from the bluetooth settings on the car.
- Remove the car from the android auto app.
You should now have a phone and car that don't know about each other at all. If you've just bought a car, start here.
- Turn off Bluetooth on the phone.
- Plug the phone into the car using USB.
- Launch Android Auto from the menu in the car.
- Follow all of the prompts on the phone. Android Auto WILL turn on the Bluetooth radio on your phone, and pair it for you.
- Enjoy frustration free Android Auto Goodness.
I've tested the above method and the usual wait time to get AA up and running has dropped from 30s+ (if at all) down to almost instantly. It seems stupidly finicky to me that AA needs to negotiate the Bluetooth for it to work smoothly, but it does. And I'm happy to let it run the show if it means I can get in to AA faster.
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