The Bluetooth-enabled Livio Radio car kit attempts to be the Holy Grail of dashboard connectivity devices, marrying smartphones with older cars that lack the hardware to fully support them.
The main idea behind the device ($120 from Livio, cheaper elsewhere) is that you can wirelessly play music from your iPhone or Android phone via your car's speakers using an FM radio connection, so whatever's playing on your phone gets piped through the car's radio.
The phone and the Livio dongle (which plugs into the cigarette lighter and is about the size of a small stack of credit cards) communicate using Bluetooth. It easily syncs with your car's radio and your phone, and has a USB port on the side to keep your handset juiced up.
Like other devices in this category, it also works as a hands-free telephone. You can answer calls with the press of a button, but dialing out must be done on the phone. The caller's voice comes through your car's speakers and sounds nice and clear. Of course, anybody else in the car can hear the conversation – a plus or minus depending upon one's viewpoint.
[Livio] recently opened up an API for the device, allowing developers to code their apps so they can be controlled via the buttons on the unit.But Livio isn't only intent on connecting your MP3s and your phone, it's tackling apps, as well. The company recently opened up an API for the device, allowing developers to code their apps so they can be controlled via the buttons on the unit. Some of the partners already using the API are streaming services like Rdio, NPR, Live365 and AirKast, which is a streaming platform for small radio stations, so it's useful for listening to sports broadcasts outside your local market. In addition to the apps the are enabled through the API, Livio makes its own phone app that can access some 45,000 internet stations, which is pretty cool.
