The next step in configuring a tablet based info-tainment system is selecting the apps. Each operating system has its own online library of applications available for download to your tablet. The good news is that Apple iTunes, Google PlayStore & Microsoft WindowsApps have thousands of apps to choose from. The bad news is that they have thousands of apps to choose from.
After spending many hours downloading and trying apps, here are the apps that I think are good choices for an info-tainment system. Your preferences may differ.
Music Apps
Maps, Navigation, Traffic Apps
- TuneIn plays local FM radio stations and Podcasts
- Spotify and Mog will let you download and save music for offline use
- Pandora finds music based upon your past selections
- GooglePlay & iTunes lets you download music for local playback
- Podcatcher or DoggCatcher is good for downloading podcasts for offline playback
- Equalizer improves sound quality with a bass booster, a 5 frequency band slider control panel, as well as presets by music genre.
- Car Tunes and PowerAmp plays stored MP3s with nice car-like interface
Travel Information Apps
- Google Maps is the gold standard for navigation and traffic congestion. Its mainly used online, but it can save a small amount of map data for offline use.
- NavFree USA and CoPilot GPS let you download offline maps for the entire USA. Then you can search for destinations and navigate without an Internet connection. They have maps for most other geographies as well.
Other Apps
- GasBuddy shows local gas stations and their gas prices
- Yelp helps you locate local gas stations, restaurants, theaters, hotels, etc. It also provides phone numbers and ratings.
It is possible to use a tablet offline, but function will be limited
- Weatherbug shows local weather conditions, radar map and forecast
- Torque can be a secondary instrument cluster to monitoring your car's performance. It can display engine OBDII trouble codes, cornering G-forces, acceleration, 0-60, and quarter-mile times. Torque requires a wireless Bluetooth OBDII transmitter like the PLX Kiwi Bluetooth ($20).
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As you mention above, TomTom, Sygic and others allow you to download maps to your tablet so you can navigate offline. This has the advantage of not losing navigation when you are out of cellular range. However, it also consumes some amount of storage on the tablet, and the maps need to be updated periodically (usually automatically, when you have a wifi connection). Overall, I prefer this solution, even with a tablet that has a data connection, as using maps in the cloud can eat up whatever data plan you may have relatively quickly.
I am also using a tablet, and think it is a great solution in the SLC in terms of available real estate (there is no way to fit a 2DIN radio in a stock dash), functionality and low cost.
Key apps for me include Tasker, and Car Home Ultra. Tasker (Android only) allows you to program the tablet to do things like turn on the radios and the screen when the car is turned on, and turn everything off when it is off. This is a great battery management approach. Car Home Ultra is a pretty good car UI for managing all your apps in a car-friendly way.