This is my issue, too. I’m a sweat monster and this just makes it worse.
This is my issue, too. I’m a sweat monster and this just makes it worse.
Federal law does not require meal or rest periods. However, many state labor laws require that a business offer 20-30 minutes for every 5-8 hours worked. It is not always required to be taken.
To all those asking why they don’t see the option on their Android: there is no option in the app, it's automatically enabled.
This video features a grown ass woman in a YOLO t-shirt, and a seemingly able-bodied woman being a lazy shit in a scooter.
Well thank you, kind sir. Your avatar is my favorite in this entire post.
Sonatas are shipping with the capability, but it isn’t activated yet. Once Hyundai is done developing it will have to be flashed at the dealer. Currently only AA is active on them.
Technically these changes likely won’t. Wireless is a hardware option, so unless is was already built in to the aftermarket unit, it won’t be available. The article says it’s done via Bluetooth but I believe it is actually a Bluetooth/Wi-Fi direct combination.
I believe the connection interfaces are different (at least that’s the explanation they’re giving), so they wouldn’t be backwards compatible.
The idea is that your car will support new CarPlay features once you update the app on your phone.
The HUs don’t need to support the new iOS, just the CarPlay app.
The head unit isn’t processing CarPlay. It’s just projecting it. The only way that it will become sluggish is if your phone is a dinosaur and can’t run the CarPlay software.
Aren’t all the features marked under the iOS 9 section of the article already available in 1 form or the other in Android?
Yeah, I totally read your first comment wrong.
What you said makes little sense. They are still building a proprietary system to allow for non-phone related functions or to allow operation should you not have a phone in the car, but they aren’t building an OS and there’s no hardware?
Not arguing that in-car LTE isn’t mostly useless. I was just saying that you don’t have to pay for it. And companies are selling to those that don’t even know that tethering is a thing.
You don’t have to pay for a redundant data connection. In-car LTE is a completely different product. That’s more for, say, kids who have tablets with Wi-Fi only connections.
Oh haha... NOW it makes sense.