GM's new self-driving pod car
The hands-free two-wheeler will be able to park itself, and come when you call it by smartphone
GM's Segway-like electric car, which is expected to be released around 2020, uses GPS signals to steer itself where a passenger tells it to go. Photo: 2010 General Motors and Wieck Media Services, Inc. SEE ALL 18 PHOTOS
Best Opinion: Fast Company, UberGizmo, BNET
The image: General Motors reportedly plans to start selling a two-seat, self-steering electric "pod" car around 2020. GM developed the design of the futuristic "Electric Network Vehicle" (EN-V) with the help of Segway, and the car balances itself using the same gyroscopic technology that keeps the two-wheeled Segway scooter from tipping over. (See an image of the pod car below.) The EN-V will be able to operate autonomously, going where its passengers tell it, and using GPS signals to find its path. It's programmed to avoid collisions with cars and other obstacles. The prototype is touring car shows now, but GM won't offer the pod cars for sale until GPS technology, which now has a 10-foot margin of error, gets more precise. The carmaker hopes to keep the cost to around $10,000.
The reaction: Finally, "the Jetsons future we've always been waiting for," says Ariel Schwartz at Fast Compan y. The EN-V can park itself, and when you need it, you can summon it with a smartphone app. "Sounds pretty exciting," says Tyler Lee at UberGizmo, "but 10 to 15 years is a pretty long wait." And the prototype can't drive in snow or rain, and lacks the juice to even climb a steep driveway, so it's not yet practical for the real world. Well, "I hope it all gets sorted out," says Jim Motavilli at BNET, "because an autonomous pod would be great for getting to my job downtown at the cloning factory in 2020." And with the EN-V doing the driving, we'll all have more time to look at our 3D iPads. Have a look at GM's pod car:

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