City cars of the future will need to be tiny, clean, energy-efficient, and given the increasing number of vehicles, able to communicate with each other to make best use of limited road space.
A team of designers has applied this concise to an existing prototype by Segway and come up with what they call an Electric Networked Vehicle (EN-V), a two-seat, electric vehicle that balances on two wheels.
The EN-V is a concept vehicle but it is far from science fiction as the technology it employs is already verified.
The EN-V can be driven like any conventional car but is also able to use a grouping of sensors, cameras, wireless communication and GPS navigation to converse with other vehicles and drive up to 30 miles on a single charge lacking any input from the driver.
Five EN-Vs can be parked in the space engaged by one large car.
A team of designers has applied this concise to an existing prototype by Segway and come up with what they call an Electric Networked Vehicle (EN-V), a two-seat, electric vehicle that balances on two wheels.
The EN-V is a concept vehicle but it is far from science fiction as the technology it employs is already verified.
The EN-V can be driven like any conventional car but is also able to use a grouping of sensors, cameras, wireless communication and GPS navigation to converse with other vehicles and drive up to 30 miles on a single charge lacking any input from the driver.
Five EN-Vs can be parked in the space engaged by one large car.
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