Logitech ZeroTouch review: This Android smartphone holder puts Amazon's Alexa in your car

Logitech's ZeroTouch smartphone holder has been on the market for almost a year, but I've ignored it because my beat doesn't include mobile devices. That changed about a month ago when Logitech integrated Amazon's Alexa Voice Service into its ZeroTouch app. Now I can use voice commands to control my smart home while I'm in the car and my smartphone is connected to the ZeroTouch.

I've encountered a few bumps in the road during my month-long review (pun intended), but I've concluded that the air-vent version of this holder fully justifies its lofty $60 price tag (simpler phone holders cost about 10 bucks.)  The dashboard version has all the same features, but I'm not as enamored with it because it must be glued to your dashboard and it costs $80. Apple iPhone users, meanwhile, might want to stop reading now: the ZeroTouch is an Android-only device for the time being.

The hiccups I encountered turned out to be not the fault of the product, but there is one other limitation (beyond being Android-only) that you'll want to know about right up front. It's not a bug, as the saying goes, it's a feature: If you want the ZeroTouch's (and Alexa's) voice responses played through your car's speakers, you'll need to set your head unit to operate in media mode. That's an Android requirement, but it makes it nearly impossible to listen to terrestrial radio on the head unit and interact with the ZeroTouch—or Alexa—at the same time.

Logitech ZeroTouch text message Michael Brown

Icons and text are prominently displayed, but you almost never need to look at the phone because a voice reads everything to you.

Fortunately, this doesn't impact using Bluetooth to make and receive calls via your head unit. I'm accustomed to listening to NPR news broadcasts when I'm in the car, however, so I tried using the ZeroTouch independently of the head unit for a while. I don't recommend it because it's too distracting: The head unit's radio will cut out when your phone rings, so you can answer the call, but it won't do that for the ZeroTouch's voice prompts. Those are played on the phone's speaker while the head unit is playing the radio. I found myself constantly reaching for the head unit's volume control either because the ZeroTouch was alerting me to an incoming message or because I wanted to use the ZeroTouch.

If you want to listen to music on your car stereo, it's far better to pair the ZeroTouch with your head unit and stream music from your phone over Bluetooth. The ZeroTouch supports Spotify, Deezer, Pandora, or Google Play Music. To do that, however, your car's Bluetooth system must be capable of supporting both phone calls and media streaming. That wasn't an issue with the new Kenwood KMM-BT515HD head unit I recently installed in my truck, but the Bluetooth in my 2010 VW Golf only allowed me to make and receive phone calls. The only way I could stream media and hear the ZeroTouch's voice prompts on my phone in the car was to physically connect the phone's headphone jack to the car's aux input.

I'll dive deeper into this and the ZeroTouch's other features later; for now, I want to focus on Logitech's Alexa integration.

Logitech ZeroTouch dashboard Michael Brown

This model of the Logitech ZeroTouch is designed to be glued to your dashboard. Make sure it doesn't obstruct your view through the windshield, or you could be ticketed in some jurisdictions. (It's obviously not permanently mounted in this photo.)

Alexa and the ZeroTouch

In my home, I have several Amazon Echo devices connected to a Vivint smart home system that monitors my home's security and controls nearly all its interior and exterior lighting, entry locks, thermostat, garage-door opener, and security cameras. I almost never reach out for a light switch, adjust the temperature at the thermostat, or even touch the Vivint Sky control panel (other than to disarm the system in the morning). Instead I tell Alexa to turn lights on and off, adjust the temperature, lock an exterior door, or arm the alarm system.

Logitech ZeroTouch Logitech

Logitech's ZeroTouch automobile smartphone mount has a battery-powered Bluetooth radio onboard. This model attaches to one of your car's air vents.

Before the ZeroTouch, I had to pull out my phone and launch the Vivint app if I needed to do any of those things from the car. And with 25 devices just for lighting control, it took a lot of scrolling to find the one I wanted to use. Now I just dock my phone to the ZeroTouch, briefly put my hand in front of its proximity detector (Logitech calls this gesture a "high five"), and summon Alexa.


Logitech ZeroTouch review: This Android smartphone holder puts Amazon's Alexa in your car Rating: 4.5 Posted by: kriskiantorose

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