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April 16, 2016 Weekend Reads: Cars
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Cars
are more than just a way to get from point A to point B. They are a
part of how we grow up, learn responsibility, and ultimately become
independent. Now more than ever, they are also marvels of engineering,
packed with computing power and digital intelligence. This weekend, MIT Technology Review
looks back at stories that explore our complex relationship with cars,
from worries about fuel efficiency and climate change to glimpses of a
future in which they, not we, are in the driver’s seat.
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How Might Apple Manufacture a Car? Apple
has neither confirmed nor denied the existence of the so-called “Apple
car” project. But late last year, we took a hard look at whether the
electronics giant could make a serious bid for a piece of the automotive
industry. If it exists, is the Apple car going to be electric?
Self-driving? And how will the company build it? Could they really
outsource the whole damned thing?
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Rebooting the Automobile By
some estimates, 25 percent of accidents are caused by drivers fiddling
with their phones. Now Apple and Google are battling to create seamless
integration between phones and cars, hoping to eliminate driver
distraction and vastly improve cars in the process. As vehicles are
increasingly governed by computers, the giants of Silicon Valley are
betting that the next big thing in cars isn’t a bigger engine—it’s
software.
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Driverless Cars Are Further Away Than You Think As
bits of automation trickle into today’s cars, this feature from 2013
rings true: everyone loves hearing about how many miles Google’s robot
cars have driven themselves, but when will driverless cars become the
norm? There are still big issues to be worked out. TL;DR: It’s gonna a
be a while, but there are some cool technologies coming to a car near
you in the meantime.
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The Trouble with India’s People Car When
it was first introduced in 2009, the Tata Nano was supposed to spark a
revolution in car ownership across India. But even at the low price of
around ,000, a year into its production the car was barely selling. Why
wasn’t India’s rising middle class interested in the world’s cheapest
car?
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Hybrids’ Rising Sun Way
back in 2004, a new car was making waves in the automotive industry. It
used a combination of a gasoline engine and an electric motor to
achieve a stunning 55 miles per gallon of fuel efficiency. More
environmentally friendly cars may have come before it—and more will
follow—but the Toyota Prius was the automobile that introduced the world
to the term “hybrid.” This is the inside story of how the Prius came to
be.
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A Turn-of-the-Century Road Trip In
1910, car-friendly roads were a rarity, and cross-country road trips
all but unheard of. But two MIT students set out on a wild ride from
Massachusetts to Oregon—pulling up in towns that had never seen a car,
scrounging for gasoline, and using their ingenuity to deal with
breakdowns. A lot of breakdowns.
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