Check your phone's internet connection. It needs a strong Wi-Fi or mobile data connection for this process to work. Ensure the vehicle is in park. Connect the phone to the vehicle via a USB cable. Review and accept the safety notice and the terms and conditions for using Android Auto. Follow the on-screen prompts on your phone. If you haven't set up Android Auto before, grant the app access to various permissions.
Select the Android Auto app on the display of your car radio or infotainment system and follow the on-screen prompts. After you perform this process the first time, you can plug in your phone via USB to activate Android Auto any time you want. If using a wired connection isn't convenient, you can pair your phone via Bluetooth instead.
Android Auto is more of an alternate way to control an Android phone so that it's easy to use while you're driving. The display is designed to be easy to read at a glance, and voice controls are integrated via Google Assistant. While Android Auto can function as a standalone app, it's built with touch-screen car radios in mind, which means that you can use other apps along with it.
When connected to one of these compatible car radios, the app can mirror the phone display to the radio display and integrate with features like steering wheel audio controls. Your smartphone must be connected to the vehicle for you to use Android Auto. Android Auto can do pretty much anything that an Android phone can do on its own; it's just tweaked and fine-tuned for an automotive setting. The basic idea is that fumbling with a phone while driving is difficult and inherently dangerous, and Android Auto alleviates some of that.
The three primary functions of Android Auto are to provide:. However, the system can be customized beyond that. For example, the turn-by-turn directions in Android Auto are handled by Google Maps, but Waze integration is supported as well. You can also customize Android Auto by personalizing the launcher screen and enabling dark mode.
The audio player in Android Auto is flexible. The app also supports integration with Pandora and Spotify , podcatchers like Pocket Casts, and others. Android Auto includes a built-in weather card to show the conditions in your current location, which is useful on long road trips.
It can integrate with your phone's dialer and supports other chat and voice apps like Skype. When you receive a text message or a message through an app like Skype, Android Auto can read it out loud. In summer , Android Auto made its overall messaging experience even easier to use, letting you access and use your messaging app of choice from the launcher screen.
Manage devices. Create a build. Push an update. Chrome OS devices. App architecture. Architecture Components. UI layer libraries. View binding. Data binding library. Lifecycle-aware components.
Paging Library. Paging 2. Data layer libraries. How-To Guides. Advanced Concepts. Threading in WorkManager. App entry points. App shortcuts. App navigation. Navigation component. App links. Dependency injection. Core topics. App compatibility.
Interact with other apps. Package visibility. Intents and intent filters. User interface. Add motion to your layout with MotionLayout. MotionLayout XML reference. Improving layout performance. Custom view components. Look and feel. Splash screens.
Add the app bar. Control the system UI visibility. Supporting swipe-to-refresh. Pop-up messages overview. Adding search functionality. Creating backward-compatible UIs. Home channels for mobile apps.
App widgets. Media app architecture. Building an audio app. Building a video app. The Google Assistant. Routing between devices. Background tasks. Manage device awake state.
Save to shared storage. Save data in a local database. Sharing simple data. Sharing files. Sharing files with NFC. Printing files. Content providers. Autofill framework. Contacts provider. Data backup. Remember and authenticate users. User location. Using touch gestures. Handling keyboard input.
Supporting game controllers. Input method editors. Performing network operations. Loading or saving a snapshot is a memory-intensive operation. If you do not have enough RAM free when a load or save operation begins, the operating system may swap the contents of RAM to the hard disk, which can greatly slow the operation.
If you experience very slow snapshot loads or saves, you may be able to speed these operations by freeing RAM. Closing applications that are not essential for your work is a good way to free RAM.
Navigate the emulator screen Use your computer mouse pointer to mimic your finger on the touchscreen; select menu items and input fields; and click buttons and controls. Table 1. Gestures for navigating the emulator Feature Description Swipe the screen Point to the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, swipe across the screen, and then release.
Drag an item Point to an item on the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, move the item, and then release. Tap touch. Pressing Control Command on Mac brings up a pinch gesture multi-touch interface.
The mouse acts as the first finger, and across the anchor point is the second finger. Drag the cursor to move the first point. Clicking the left mouse button acts like touching down both points, and releasing acts like picking both up. Point to the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, swipe across the screen, and then release. Point to an item on the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, move the item, and then release.
Point to the screen, press the primary mouse button, and then release. For example, you could click a text field to start typing in it, select an app, or press a button. Point to an item on the screen, press the primary mouse button, hold, and then release.
For example, you could open options for an item. You can type in the emulator by using your computer keyboard, or using a keyboard that pops up on the emulator screen.
For example, you could type in a text field after you selected it. Open a vertical menu on the screen and use the scroll wheel mouse wheel to scroll through the menu items until you see the one you want. Click the menu item to select it. Resize the emulator as you would any other operating system window.
The emulator maintains an aspect ratio appropriate for your device. Volume up. Click to view a slider control and turn the volume up.
Click again to turn it up more, or use the slider control to change the volume. Volume down. Click to view a slider control and turn the volume down. Click again to turn it down more, or use the slider control to change the volume. Rotate left. Rotate right. Take screenshot.
Click to take a screenshot of the device. For details, see Screenshots. Enter zoom mode. Click so the cursor changes to the zoom icon. To exit zoom mode, click the button again. Right-click to zoom out. Left-click and drag to select a box-shaped area to zoom in on.
Right-click and drag a selection box to reset to default zoom. To tap the device screen in zoom mode, Control-click Command-click on Mac. Return to the previous screen, or close a dialog box, an options menu, the Notifications panel, or the onscreen keyboard. Overview Recent Apps. To open an app, tap it. To remove a thumbnail from the list, swipe it left or right. This button isn't supported for Wear OS. Single points In the Single points tab, you can use the Google Maps webview to search for points of interest, just as you would when using Google Maps on a phone or in a browser.
Routes Similar to the Single points tab, the Routes tab provides a Google Maps webview that you can use to create a route between two or more locations. To create and save a route, do the following: In the map view, use the text field to search for the first destination in your route.
Select the location from the search results. Select the Navigate button. Select the starting point of your route from the map. Optional Click Add destination to add more stops to your route. Save your route by clicking Save route in the map view. Specify a name for the route and click Save. In the file dialog, select a file on your computer and click Open.
Optionally select a Speed. While a virtual device is running, you can add up to two additional displays as follows: Add another display by clicking Add secondary display. From the dropdown menu under Secondary displays , do one of the following: Select one of the preset aspect ratios.
Select custom and set the height , width , and dpi for your custom display. Optional Click Add secondary display to add a third display. Click Apply changes to add the specified display s to the running virtual device. The emulator lets you simulate incoming phone calls and text messages.
To initiate a call to the emulator: Select or type a phone number in the From field. Click Call Device. Optionally click Hold Call to put the call on hold. To end the call, click End Call. To send a text message to the emulator: Select or type a phone number in the From field. Type a message in the SMS message field. All messages and content from social media platforms can be seen on your dashboard exactly how they appear on the target device. You can view every email sent to or received by the target device.
You will be able to see the date, time and contact information. You can view the websites visited with web addresses, duration, etc. You can view full diagnostics of the target phone including battery life, data usage, Bluetooth connectivity, etc.
You can view all the applications currently installed and running on the target device. You may also be able to block applications.
You can lock the target phone from any remote location using any web-enabled device.
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