Keith Tanner said:
In reply to Gearheadotaku (Forum Supporter) :
Consumers happened. "I wanna stream Spotify!" "I want CarPlay!" "I want satellite radio!" "I want better sound quality!"
I'll bet the 2016 Miata Sport isn't affected, as it has a much simpler infotainment setup with no screen. Although it would be interesting to know if it's got the same processing behind it.
Here's what I don't understand. I've had most of that technology, in a way, since the early 2000s with cheap aftermarket head units. Entry level Kenwood, clarion, alpine head units could handle streaming via Bluetooth or aux cable since the technology was rolled out to the masses while major manufacturers were still acting like a CD player was the hottest new tech. Satellite radio adapters were released immediately, followed shortly by being built into new units. My palm treos, my Samsung Instinct, hell I think my Motorola E815 and possibly razor could all do Bluetooth music and calls through my head units.
All that while looking, objectively at least, better than original. Until the rollout of touchscreen, which was still years before OEs, and in some cases still performs better. But with the decision to build the car around the infotainment system, updating and upgrading as a consumer is considerably more difficult these days.
I just never understood the gap in technology, unless it was just too scary for the average consumer at the time.
I guess what I'm getting at is that none of this stuff is really new tech anymore. Some of it is pushing 15, 20 years old. The bugs and kinks should be worked out by now surely. There will always be edge cases, and updates can interfere with legacy code, but the basic underlying aspects are always the same.
But I'm still surprised to meet people listening to broadcast radio, and haven't personally, willingly, listened to it in a very very very long time.