We tried Apple CarPlay, and it could completely disrupt the auto industry in one important way
CarPlay 1
CarPlay 1

(Matthew DeBord/Business Insider)
Coming to a dashboard near you.

Automakers have given up fighting Apple and Google and are now joining the tech giants.

General Motors, for one, will be making Apple CarPlay available on nearly its entire 2016 model lineup, according to Consumer Reports. Android Auto will come later.

We recently spent a few days with CarPlay in a 2016 GM vehicle, and the experience was a mixed bag. But that might have had more to do with the car than with CarPlay.

GM lent us a Corvette Stingray that was CarPlay-equipped. The Stingray was Business Insider's 2015 Car of the Year, and, for our money, it's just about the best high-performance bargain in the market.

So you're really supposed to be thinking about how much giddy fun you're having while driving this sleek beast, not whether you're disconnected from your iExistence while behind the wheel. My CarPlay test might have been a bit easier had GM lent me an SUV.

And one other thing — the Vette was a convertible. And it's summer. You get the idea.

Still, CarPlay is astoundingly impressive in on critical respect: Siri.

CarPlay Corvette
CarPlay Corvette

(Matthew DeBord/Business Insider)
Maybe not the best car for testing out CarPlay.

The best Siri can be

Siri, the iPhone's virtual assistant, hasn't exactly been a ravishing success. But that's because no one really wants to talk to their phone, at least not often.

Talking to Siri in a car, on the other hand, is much more natural. Plenty of new cars and trucks have some kind of voice interface, but in my experience, they're all pretty bad. But Siri on CarPlay is brilliant. It's like having K.I.T.T. or J.A.R.V.I.S. or the computer from "Star Trek: The Next Generation" installed in your dashboard. You speak simple voice commands, like "Send a text" or "Find me a Starbucks" and Siri responds. It reads your texts and reads them mellifluously. Its machine brain understands your human diction — better, it seems, in a car.

It's a revelation. And it really should make for safer driving in the long run, because a sophisticated voice system like this really does cut back on distracted driving, without the voice system being a distraction.

Getting CarPlay to work is straightforward. You plug your iPhone (which has to be running iOS 7.1) into the car's USB port and presto! CarPlay appears as an option on the central infotainment touchscreen. Tap it and a suite of CarPlay-ified Apple icons takes over. The navigation is then very iPhone-like, managed through a round, white home button that picks up the iPhone's critical interface feature.

CarPlay 2
CarPlay 2

(Matthew DeBord/Business Insider)
Look familiar?