Cars are generally “locked in”, as far as their features and software are concerned, about 3 years prior to release. One of the reasons for the gigantic jump in car prices in 2018 (IIRC), in the US, was because that was the model year where a backup camera was required to be standard. The requirement to suddenly retool their assembly lines was a huge disruption. Notice how the Ioniq and Licid gravity are the only vehicles in 2025 with NACS, ~3 years after the brands announced their switch to it.
As far as I know it’s a license thing. For wireless they have to pay a fee to Google (I think I read something like 500 USD but no guarantee for the number). You can get an wired2wireless adapter for less than 50 bucks, so I personally don’t see it as an issue.
Sure, makes sense. How any car made post 2020 can justify not having wireless Android Auto or Carplay is beyond me.
Cars are generally “locked in”, as far as their features and software are concerned, about 3 years prior to release. One of the reasons for the gigantic jump in car prices in 2018 (IIRC), in the US, was because that was the model year where a backup camera was required to be standard. The requirement to suddenly retool their assembly lines was a huge disruption. Notice how the Ioniq and Licid gravity are the only vehicles in 2025 with NACS, ~3 years after the brands announced their switch to it.
As far as I know it’s a license thing. For wireless they have to pay a fee to Google (I think I read something like 500 USD but no guarantee for the number). You can get an wired2wireless adapter for less than 50 bucks, so I personally don’t see it as an issue.