The Smartphone Car Key Thing Needs To Stop

People generally seem to be on board with the new 2020 Lincoln Aviator. I know I am. It looks great, is probably real comfortable and comes with a ton of power. But it also has a Phone As A Key feature, which is a terrible idea and a trend I wish automakers would drop altogether.

Lincoln’s Phone As A Key uses a Bluetooth connection to pair with your smartphone. Using the Lincoln app, the system “enables certain features using the embedded modem or Wi-Fi, from a distance, the low-energy connection works even in areas where there isn’t a cell signal, like an underground parking garage,” according to a press release.

It’s compatible with iPhones running iOS 9.0 and up and Android phones. You can use the feature to unlock and lock the car, start the engine, open and close the windows and lift-gate, view car info and enable valet mode. The Aviator has 11 antennas in order to pick up the signal. Eleven!

There’s also a backup ignition passcode customers can use if the phone gets lost or the battery dies. And the Phone As A Key can be deleted from a phone “easily” with the app if a phone goes missing.

That all sounds fancy and high-tech, but what was so wrong with a plain, old car key that Lincoln felt the need to develop this feature? A car key is simple. It’s a physical thing you can hold in your hand and it’s only for your car. This new system sounds like it is needlessly complicated.

A car key will unlock or lock the car way more quickly than this app could. Think about the process.

  1. You fish the key out of your pocket or purse.
  2. With the key in your hand, you push the button. Muscle memory dictates that you don’t even need to look down to hit the unlock button.

And boom! You’re done. Two steps. Only one hand required.

How many steps are there for the phone key?

  1. You fish the phone out of your pocket or purse.
  2. You must unlock the phone first.
  3. You locate the Lincoln app and open it.
  4. You must look at your phone screen to hit the unlock button because you aren’t able to feel where it is.

That’s two times as many steps, and arguably requiring both your hands. That, friends, is inefficiency.
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