Honda Promises CarPlay, Android Auto on 2024 Prologue

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Honda says their first volume electric vehicle, the Prologue, will play nicely with wireless Google built-in plus wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility. Why are we mentioning a seemingly trivial item? Because alert readers know Prologue is baked using General Motors ingredients – and GM recently indicated it plans to swear off smartphone integration in favor of its own interface.


Sure, vehicles that share a platform often have many differences (unless they’re badge-engineered jobs from the Bad Old Days) ranging from interior and exterior styling to what shows up on infotainment screens. In this age of all digital everything where many people have large swaths of their lives on their phones, the latter is no small detail – especially when one of the planet’s largest automakers suggests it is ditching a tool used by many.

Since the Honda Prologue is based on GM’s Ultium architecture, this news should derail any future arguments from The General that their intent to abandon Apple CarPlay/Android Auto is based on some sort of necessity borne from the Ultium technologies. Instead, it should be seen for what it is – a play to recapture the in-car experience, permitting GM more control over the environment and likely introducing revenue opportunities.

As for the Prologue, spox for Honda are touting tools like Google Maps as a way to optimize route planning for recharging or finding charging stations along the way to minimize travel time.

"Honda’s long standing in-vehicle tech collaborations with Google and Apple allow us to offer our customers their choice of intuitive and accessible digital services that will enhance the ownership experience of the all-new 2024 Honda Prologue," said Raj Manakkal who is a veep in Honda’s Digital Services Development division.

This stands in stark contrast to statements made earlier this year by GM about dropping Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. "As we scale our EVs and launch our Ultifi software platform, we can do more than ever before with in-vehicle technologies and over-the-air updates,” said Edward Kummer, GM's chief digital officer. “All of this is allowing us to constantly improve the customer experience we can offer across our brands."

Honda will begin pre-sales for the Prologue this fall, ahead of a winter 2024 on-sale.

[Image: Honda]

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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • Redapple2 Redapple2 on Jun 28, 2023

    GM is Rubbish. Honda is pretty good. wont work

    I mean really stinky rubbish.

  • Wjtinfwb Wjtinfwb on Jun 28, 2023

    Strange bedfellows.... I've always seen Honda as an Engineering company first, with mediocre Marketing. GM however, as a Marketing juggernaut, but mediocre Engineering company. In my mind, this indicates that Honda isn't sold on EVs having a long and fruitful future so they're outsourcing that product to GM. If you recall, Honda did the same thing with SUVs 20 years ago, rebadging Isuzu's instead of building their own. Honda was wrong then, and may be wrong now as well. Hopefully the GM tie up creates some better products than the Isuzu deal did.

  • Bill I bought a 2013 base mini convert manual with less than 30,000 miles last year. While I don't have the beautiful aural sensations of the inline 6, I have been having great fun on the rural roads of western Massachusetts. Kind of a modern version of an old English sports car. I ditched the run flats immediately, went to Conti extremecontact dws 06+. I like them so much I put them on my wife's Audi TT. The shocks I have been eyeing but don't really need yet are Koni special active with FSD technology. Supposed to suppress the sharp nasty bumps but remain firmly sporty otherwise. I had also been looking at the Z4's but couldn't pass on the super low mileage of the mini.
  • Paul Another beemer boy, immune to the laws of man and physics, driving his M3 through a school zone at 45 since Waze said it would cut 15 seconds off his commute.I bow before your righteous anger.
  • Paul Oh, the irony. 10 years ago they had solid entries in all these categories - C-Max hybrid and PHEV, Fusion Hybrid and PHEV, Focus Electric. 20 years ago you could get an Escape Hybrid.Ford and their dealers tossed these over the wall and walked away from them, never doing anything to promote or improve them over their life cycle. They still have a newer version of the Escape PHEV, which isn't a bad vehicle but I doubt if the buying public knows they exist & I rarely see one on the road.The Maverick hybrid is a nice idea and they could sell more if they would build more but again, I rarely see one in the wild.Feckless and clueless management and board - they richly deserve their coming bankruptcy.
  • Lorenzo If Bill Ford wants to see Ford Motor survive another generation, he'll have to hire a replacement for Farley soon, one with an engineering degree and experience with automobile assembly lines and a love for cars, and surround him with other engineering degree executives. Any executives with BA degrees and MBAs don't belong in manufacturing, they're finance people, at best.
  • Lorenzo The price is a bit steep for a daily driver, and that's what I'd use it for. If you live in California, a benefit is that it's smog exempt. It's so old, there's nothing to be "flashed". Any flashing would have to be done manually by the driver.
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