RE: Hands on with Apple CarPlay Ultra

RE: Hands on with Apple CarPlay Ultra

Thursday 12th June

Hands on with Apple CarPlay Ultra

Aston Martin is the first out of the blocks with Apple's next big thing - we took it for a spin


If we’re being honest, yours truly was probably the worst person to send to try out Apple CarPlay Ultra - the next generation of software pitched as the ‘ultimate in-car experience’ and debuting on Aston Martin’s newest models. Despite being heavily bought into Apple’s ecosystem, I don’t generally use CarPlay, mainly because doing so prevents you from fully interacting with an OEM’s infotainment system - and on the basis that these now dictate a huge chunk of any modern car’s usability, it would be wrong not to experience them in isolation. Also, it means turning on Siri, and I really don’t like talking to my phone like it’s some kind of indentured, all-knowing friend. I don’t like talking into it full stop. 

But I better get used to it. Apple, as it is wont to do - and certainly now it appears to have given up all ambition of building its own car - wants to move the CarPlay game on. Mostly, one suspects, because it doesn’t really want you to stop using your phone ever (especially if doing so means looking at someone else’s user interface) but also because better integrating it with your car is simply the next logical step in the sort of seamless user journey that Cupertino specialises in. ‘The best of iPhone and the best of the car’ as Apple put it this week - a sentiment echoed by Aston Martin, the first carmaker to take advantage of the Ultra toolkit. 

For Gaydon, the advantages are not hard to fathom. Aston likes to think of itself as a global leader in design terms, and while that’s true when it comes to the exterior styling of its cars, it could certainly stand to learn a thing or two about how best to combine visual appeal and intuitive ease of use in a glossy new UI. Its latest infotainment system - though capable enough and beautifully integrated into the dash - is a tediously fiddly case in point. So who better to collaborate with? The Aston customer gets an approximation of an interface they are already intimately familiar with; Aston itself gets a unified, Apple-flavoured skin for the car’s many other functions, yet is free to develop its own brand-specific theme to sit on top. Win, win. 

Well, eventually win, win. First, you’ll need to make the crucial connection between car and phone work - not, it must be said, a 30-second job with an older iPhone (you’ll need at least an iPhone 12 running iOS 18.5 or later) and a patchy 4G signal. That Aston’s expert on the subject arrived in the DBX's passenger seat armed with a USB-C cable - sorry mate, not this iPhone - suggests that a physical coupling is still the best way to proceed initially. Failing that, you might want to bring the Product Communication Manager along with you, she armed with two much larger, newer iPhones and a voice well-practised in bringing Siri to heel come what may. Or that’s what I did. Worked a treat. 

As the case tends to be with Apple products, once you’re over the initial download this, update that hump, it all works with a well-oiled sense of consistency. Old-school CarPlay already did a fairly nifty job of bringing iOS into your car - but that core functionality is now complemented on the main touchscreen by access to climate control, drive modes, the audio setup, parking sensors and cameras, the active safety systems, and almost everything you can configure inside the vehicle. In fact, Aston suggested that the only outliers were the ambient light settings and the engine telemetry data, which currently required the native software to display properly. But even this transition doesn’t unduly upset the user-friendly vibe. 

This vibe, as you might expect, is a significant improvement. Probably there is a longer discussion to have about what it means to submit some of these control surfaces to such obvious Apple-ification - i.e. do you really want your car’s infotainment display to mimic your iPhone - but for now, Aston can neatly sidestep this kind of issue by pointing to the stockpile of physical switchgear that still flanks the screen in all its cars. So while selecting the DBX’s Sport mode via an iOS drop-down menu is definitely not going to stir your soul, you’re unlikely to do that anyway when you’ve got a lovely fat dial to hand. Having said that, it speaks volumes about Apple’s knack for touchscreen iconography that I found myself adjusting the temperature using the screen almost immediately, even with a shortcut nearby. 

At any rate, the other novelty of Ultra occurs in the instrument cluster, where speedometer, rev counter, fuel gauge, temperature gauge et al is now encompassed. This is where Aston’s own chosen theme, designed in-house, really comes into play. Happily, the brand has kept things nice and simple: you get two dials, in understated hues, offset by a white font with an additional (configurable) panel between them. I’d still prefer a needle to the rise and fall of a coloured band (see pictures), but these are customisable at least, as are other things, like the shade of wallpaper. Indeed, the options for personalisation - presumably set to grow - are doubtless part of the appeal to Aston. Today, colour palettes; tomorrow, the world. 

For now, of course, the choice beyond Aston’s bespoke theme is dictated by Apple and therefore tends toward exactly the kind of look you’d expect: no one reading this is likely to want an instrument panel mostly devoted to an album cover. Or even Apple Maps. Or ones that make the gauges look like an app for your boiler. But while they seem mildly inappropriate in a six-figure, V8-powered DBX, they will doubtless blend in elsewhere. And besides, it’s hard to work up a head of dissenting steam when you’re presented with something that often imitates the soft-toned, everything-in-its-place precision of Apple iOS. We’re just too used to it working faultlessly, which it does, even via Aston’s haptic steering wheel controls. 

If that all sounds like scant return for dispensing with analogue instrumentation, then you’re not entirely wrong. I’d personally swap the implied convenience of being able to ask Siri to change the temperature for a proper rev counter in the time it takes to blink. But if we’re all willing to grumpily concede that era is now in the rearview mirror (for anything that isn’t a Caterham Seven or Pagani Utopia), then Apple CarPlay Ultra - and its eventual roll-out in all Aston Martin cars from August - makes a predictably good and fluid case for itself. For many, if not most buyers, its inclusion will seem like a no-brainer. For the rest of us, we’ll just get used to it. Or else stoically continue using the not-quite-so-good interface that remains underneath.


Author
Discussion

Motormouth88

Original Poster:

578 posts

74 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
One for the tech heads…read the whole thing, haven’t got a clue what it said. biggrin

Billy_Whizzzz

2,330 posts

157 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Car play is great as OEM maps are never as good as Google Maps etc - not just for navigation but traffic and speed cameras. And it is great to be able to dictate messages etc on the move.

Ian-g14dj

13 posts

113 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Hmm, another step towards the homogenization of the automobile. Today's cars have lost all personality, individuality. They all look the same from the outside, and now thanks to Apple, they'll all look the same from the inside.

Does Aston Martin really want their dash to look largely indifferent to that of a Kia ?!

Twinair

858 posts

156 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
New school vehicle reliability & performance, with older school analogue dials and gauges, as long as the music sounds good - I really do not want a ‘connected car’.

Sadly, big ‘Co’ wants you connected - All. The. Time. $$$$

And most are happy to, even whilst asleep…

Billy_Whizzzz

2,330 posts

157 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Ian-g14dj said:
Hmm, another step towards the homogenization of the automobile. Today's cars have lost all personality, individuality. They all look the same from the outside, and now thanks to Apple, they'll all look the same from the inside.

Does Aston Martin really want their dash to look largely indifferent to that of a Kia ?!
But it doesn’t. One part of one screen has a similar interface (if you want). That’s it.

pbe624

196 posts

149 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Another step towards losing total control over your car, if a hacker decides to have a play with your systems... . And, as the author, I don't like to talk to a car (remember 'Hey Mercedes...'). For non-English speakers, it is always an issue and for convertible drivers, a shouting game.

Analogue cars are the ones for me, but of course, I am too old to have grown up with a phone stuck to my hand :-)

Billy_Whizzzz

2,330 posts

157 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Wow lots of old men shouting at clouds

Roman Moroni

1,185 posts

137 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I am properly thick when it comes down to these things.

Genuine question:

What happens if you don't have an I-Phone? I've always used Samsungs; does this mean I would have to get an Apple phone should I eventually bu a car with Apple CarPlay?

ChocolateFrog

31,448 posts

187 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Roman Moroni said:
I am properly thick when it comes down to these things.

Genuine question:

What happens if you don't have an I-Phone? I've always used Samsungs; does this mean I would have to get an Apple phone should I eventually bu a car with Apple CarPlay?
Just keep using the superior version of CarPlay I guess.

chrisironside

807 posts

176 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Motormouth88 said:
One for the tech heads read the whole thing, haven t got a clue what it said. biggrin
I don't think you should need to work in tech to understand an article about Apple CarPlay on a car site.
Writing for other people really wasn't this guy's calling!

Dave Hedgehog

14,884 posts

218 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Roman Moroni said:
I am properly thick when it comes down to these things.

Genuine question:

What happens if you don't have an I-Phone? I've always used Samsungs; does this mean I would have to get an Apple phone should I eventually bu a car with Apple CarPlay?
carplay for iphones, andriod auto for the rest

NGK210

3,851 posts

159 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
IMHO, no-one creates better UI and designs more aesthetically pleasing graphics than Apple.
And nothing dates a digital-era used car more than its dash and infotainment screens’ naff old fonts, bleak colour palette and grim layout – all of which can affect used values.
But with Ultra, the free annual iOS upgrade will mean a shed’s dash always looks hip, even if its exterior now looks as cool as Trump’s barnet.

Dracoro

8,882 posts

259 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Roman Moroni said:
I am properly thick when it comes down to these things.

Genuine question:

What happens if you don't have an I-Phone? I've always used Samsungs; does this mean I would have to get an Apple phone should I eventually bu a car with Apple CarPlay?
No.

If using Android, that just does the central console screen as it always has done. The main binnacle will simply display the default Aston dials etc.

In other words, you don't need to use Apple CarPlay at all on these cars (as will just use manufacturer default UI, however if you use CarPlay Ultra you then get the "replacement" UI instead.

malaccamax

1,422 posts

245 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
It is tiresome reading these things when the writer is so keen to establish his credentials as someone who generally hates digital stuff in the car. Don't assume we're all grumpy old men! (heading that way, not quite there yet)

fantheman80

1,935 posts

63 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I wonder if Apple could add an extra layer of security to your motor, stop these keyless relay thefts etc, by you entering your screen unlock code to start it! I wouldn't mind that if it meant the scum bags had something else to stop them

Roman Moroni

1,185 posts

137 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Dracoro said:
Roman Moroni said:
I am properly thick when it comes down to these things.

Genuine question:

What happens if you don't have an I-Phone? I've always used Samsungs; does this mean I would have to get an Apple phone should I eventually bu a car with Apple CarPlay?
No.

If using Android, that just does the central console screen as it always has done. The main binnacle will simply display the default Aston dials etc.

In other words, you don't need to use Apple CarPlay at all on these cars (as will just use manufacturer default UI, however if you use CarPlay Ultra you then get the "replacement" UI instead.
Lovely.

Thanks for explaining it in words I understand!

beer

Quickmoose

4,986 posts

137 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I don't see this as me being old (53) and shouting at clouds.

As said before, you can't legally interact with a phone screen with your fingers... oh but now you can because it's part of the car? its BS
The amount of time you have your eyes on the screen to look for icons, to look for menus, read the words. make sure your finger is where it should be and make sure it's still where it should be thanks to that pothole you didn't see.
It's a vicious circle that requires legislation to make sure you stay in lane and are aware of the current speed limit.
Its a backwards step for the car... or a further step towards full automation.
Either way - it's crap.
Some things, if they're not broke don't need reinventing.
Evolve them sure, perfect them, develop them, but replacing them with a more dangerous alternative... nuts.

Magikarp

1,257 posts

62 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
malaccamax said:
It is tiresome reading these things when the writer is so keen to establish his credentials as someone who generally hates digital stuff in the car. Don't assume we're all grumpy old men! (heading that way, not quite there yet)
It's tiresome reading Cackett. Seldom do I have to endure such linguistic porridge.

Edited by Magikarp on Wednesday 11th June 10:11

Ham_and_Jam

3,054 posts

111 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
A review of Apple Ultra Carplay that doesn’t actually have any factual first person interaction. Brilliant.

bobj42

85 posts

25 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Given this is a world first, you'd think they'd have gone to greater efforts integrating the screen.
The iPad-glued-to-the-dashboard look is not going to age well.