Every few months the open road beckons and I get the insatiably
urge to sit behind the wheel, buckle up and take a road trip. This time,
though, rather than hitting the open road with just my car, a gas
credit card and a few sandwiches, I'm bringing my iPad along for the
ride.
The simple fact is that the iPad is particularly
well-suited for the car. After all, it has a simple interface, doesn't
require a physical keyboard and is small and thin enough to fit into
some of the nooks and crannies of a car. For that matter, an Android
tablet can do just about the same thing.
With an iPad along
for the ride from Point A to B, you won't have to do without a digital
thing on the road. I've set up my car with everything from online video
and Internet radio to GPS mapping and even troubleshooting what's wrong
under the hood when the pesky "Check Engine" light comes on.
To do it right requires some special hardware and effort to meld the iPad with the car gps,
including powering the pad, providing it with data and hanging it in a
strategic place. All in all, the iPad can makes itself at home on the
road.
This time, I'm off to upstate New York on business, but
the destination doesn't matter as much as the journey. Here are 10 tips
on for retrofitting a car (I used my old Mercedes station wagon) for an
iPad, none of which require much in the way of mechanical aptitude or
tools. They'll work with just about any vehicle.
Before
getting started, a word of caution is called for. Regardless of whether
you receive an urgent email from your significant other or the latest
viral video from a buddy-as the driver, your attention needs to be
exclusively on the road and not on the iPad's screen. That's where your
navigator/shot-gun passenger comes in. Let him or her take care of the
technology while you eat up the miles.
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