Android Auto is a new feature that allows users with phones running Google's software to access apps and features from their car's touch screen. People can use navigation apps, send text messages, use Google Assistant and more without having to mess with their phone while driving. Until now, Android users have been able to use the feature using a cord. Now, the feature is wireless.

Rick Noetzli, the general manager for Kenwood product research and development, noted that wireless Android Auto is fully functional from their standpoint; phone manufacturers just haven't caught up to the standard yet. "Our radios can communicate with any smartphone that has the right protocols," he said in a release. "It's just that, as of now, there are only a handful of phones that do, and these are currently all Google devices."