The long-term car is an extension of your home, according to Hyundai.
The Korean automaker has introduced a cab concept that is nothing like the comfortable second row interior that is usually found in today’s cars and SUVs and that looks more like your living room.
Built-in headrest speakers and a flexible 77-inch OLED display on the ceiling allow for a seamless transition to convey everything you see before you leave home. helps keep the cab blank and UV LED lamps on the ceiling disinfect surfaces.
“The Ioniq Concept booth is unique and unprecedented technique for improving visitor delight, as it can be tailor-made for other desires and lifestyles,” said Wonhong Cho, Hyundai’s executive vice president and global marketing director. Electric cars will allow us to revolutionize the fun of Hyundai visitors, allowing them to make more internal and external cars. “
This evolution of the vehicle as a means of transport towards the concept of “custom mobility solution” demonstrates what is imaginable when autonomous cars arrive in spite of everything. Self-driving cars will waste the time and attention of occupants who would have worn out on the road, and high-capacity electric batteries in electric cars will open the cab area and provide a source of force for the devices.
This design exercise is Hyundai’s human-centered “Mobility Vision” concept, which debuted at the 2017 Consumer Electronics Show and evolved together with LG Electronics.
Although this cellular display is implausible, the company says it plans to offer “value-added experiences” in vehicles, starting with the Ioniq five EV, which is expected to be introduced early next year.
I am an automotive generation and a way of life that covers the engines of choice, the start-ups of transport, the next generation information and entertainment systems and practically everything.
I’m an automotive generation and a way of life that encompasses propulsion systems, transportation start-ups, next-generation information and entertainment systems, and basically anything that can “disrupt” your commute. CNN. com and in several print and online publications, adding Roadandtrack. com, Popular Mechanics and Penthouse.