23 September 2010

Car Computer vs. Droid

I've been meaning to post something about this for some time, but haven't had a chance...

Last year, I was making some plans to install a computer in my car, to use for navigation, entertainment, etc.

However, in February, I upgraded my cell phone to an Android phone, a Motorola Droid from Verizon.

What I've realized is that everything that I wanted to do with the car computer, Droid does!

I was planning to take my old G4 Mac Mini, and mount it in the trunk. I found a power supply from Carnetix that works with the Mini, and will wake or sleep the computer with the ignition. I found a head unit from Xenarc that is a standard DIN unit that would fit in the dash of my Jetta. The Xenarc has a DVI input to connect for the video on the Mini. It uses a touch screen, which connects to the computer as a USB mouse. It has the amplifier and radio tuner, a volume control, balance and fader, tone controls, etc. so that it works as the head unit even without using the computer.

I have an old Garmin GPS-III, with a serial cable and USB adaptor to use for navigation, using RouteBuddy as the software.

Since the Mac Mini can play DVD's, and has iTunes for music, it would be easy to use for in-dash entertainment. I was thinking that Front Row would make a decent interface to use in the car. I found a plug-in framework called FrontPython that allows adding other applications to Front Row. I was going to build a FrontPython plug-in to add RouteBuddy to Front Row to make it easy to access.

When I got my Droid, I also got the car dock, which is a suction-cup mount that the Droid clips into while driving. The phone works well enough using the speakerphone that I use it for hands-free operation. The Google Maps navigation works great, especially with the voice search. I have used DoubleTwist to sync my iTunes library to the Droid, so I have music available if I wanted. Since the Droid uses a standard 3.5mm headphone jack, I could plug the Droid into auxiliary input on my existing car stereo. I can also stream video from a variety of sources, so I can get plenty of entertainment from the Droid, including email, web, testing, twitter, etc.

Part of my reason for wanting the car computer was to keep me occupied on the frequent occasions that I was sitting in the car waiting for kids. With the Dorid, I have plenty of entertainment, and navigation, in my pocket at all times.