Wayne Cunningham reviews cars and writes about automotive technology for CNET's Roadshow. Prior to the automotive beat, he covered spyware, Web building technologies, and computer hardware. He began ...
Problem: You want to listen to music and answer calls from your phone while you’re driving, but your old car doesn’t have Bluetooth. Also, you don’t have an AUX or USB cord to link the two. What do ...
[Tim] drives a 1995 Mitsubishi TS Magna, which is equipped with a less than stellar accessory package he lovingly calls a “poverty pack”. He outfitted his ride with an aftermarket head unit that can ...
June 23, 2014 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google If you have an older car without Bluetooth built into it, you can buy adapters to do so. But, Redditor parkerlreed ...
There’s a lot of car and home audio equipment still around that was never designed to be Bluetooth compatible. With a good Bluetooth receiver, that’s not a problem. Plug it in, link it up, and you’re ...
When it comes to used cars, I'm pretty open-minded. In the past four years, I've owned a Lincoln Town Car, Toyota 4Runner, Mazda 3, Mazda Miata, Acura CL Type-S, Lexus LS400, Honda S2000, and Porsche ...
The ability to play music in your car over a Bluetooth connection is very handy. You can typically just leave your phone’s Bluetooth module turned on and it will automatically pair to your car. Then ...