Start with Bluetooth. Car28 typically exposes a classic Bluetooth name for audio and calls and may also use Bluetooth Low Energy for the companion app. On iPhone, open Settings, tap Bluetooth, and pair the main Car28 entry. After pairing, grant access to contacts if you want caller ID on the dash. If the companion app uses BLE scanning, iOS may prompt for Bluetooth permission and sometimes Location permission to allow device discovery. Keep the app open for the first sync to complete. On Android, enable Bluetooth, pair with Car28, and confirm any prompts for call and media audio. If the app requests Nearby Devices, Bluetooth, or Location access for discovery, allow them. Many Android phones also ask to disable battery optimizations for the Car28 app so it can keep a steady link in the background. If your car head unit already has CarPlay or Android Auto, you can still pair Car28; just decide which device handles calls and media in your Bluetooth settings to avoid double-routing audio.
Car28 does not replace CarPlay or Android Auto; it sits alongside them. On iPhone, CarPlay is a closed, Apple-defined interface. Third-party accessories cannot inject custom screens into CarPlay, but they can share audio, calls, and sensor data over Bluetooth and through their own iOS app. That means you can run Car28 in the background while CarPlay handles maps and messages, or open the Car28 app on your phone if you need to adjust a mode. On Android, Android Auto is more flexible in how apps present data, but it still follows Google’s safety rules. Expect Car28 to surface controls through notifications or a lightweight in-app panel rather than a custom Auto screen, unless the vendor offers an Android Auto-compatible module. In both worlds, the cleanest setup is to let CarPlay or Android Auto run navigation and messaging, and assign Car28 the jobs it is best at: call clarity, sensor features, and car-specific functions. If your head unit lacks CarPlay or Android Auto, Car28 can still deliver hands-free calling and media via standard Bluetooth.
When folks in Hong Kong say “Carousell HK vs Taobao secondhand,” they’re really comparing two very different ways to buy used items. Carousell HK is a local, peer‑to‑peer marketplace: people in Hong Kong list what they want to sell, you chat, negotiate, and either meet up or arrange local delivery. It feels like an online flea market with a community vibe. On the Taobao side, “secondhand” often points to Xianyu (Idle Fish), Alibaba’s massive resale platform that sits alongside the Taobao ecosystem. It’s China‑wide, algorithm‑heavy, and tends to surface a wild range of niche items at scale. For Hong Kong buyers, purchasing from Xianyu/Taobao secondhand can mean cross‑border shipping, translation, and sometimes using a forwarder if a seller doesn’t ship internationally.
Casual weekend: Throw a cotton or waxed car coat over a crewneck tee, relaxed chinos or dark denim, and low-profile sneakers or desert boots. Add a beanie when it is crisp out, or a baseball cap when it drizzles. Keep the front open, collar popped if you like, and let the coat tidy up the whole outfit. The mid-thigh length keeps proportions balanced with wider pants or straight legs.
JDM is a huge umbrella: daily kei cars, track‑ready specials, vintage icons, and mild customs that never leave a tight neighborhood street. Yes, drifting and touge runs are part of the lore, but most owners are simply enthusiasts who love clean builds, subtle mods, and weekend meets. You’ll hear styles like “shakotan” (low), “itasha” (anime‑wrapped), and “VIP” (luxury sedans with serious fitment). Many builds highlight “junsei” reliability with “after” parts used carefully—function first, flair second.