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Our Attraction with the ‘Future’
First prize goes to Hendo Hover by Arx Pax.
Second place is awarded to SLIDE by Lexus.
While the interiors differ by way of a supercooling superconductor and the exterior designs differ in function versus luxury, the undeniable correlation between Arx Pax and Lexus is their dependent use of magnetism used to glide their respective hoverboard inches above the ground. Thus far, principles of physics have revealed magnets as the primary source of generating a hovering effect with a person riding a wheel-less skateboard above a metal/magnetic surface.
To create the illusion of a hoverboard Marty McFly might ride to perfect his riding and escaping skills, Lexus built a skate park in Barcelona, Spain with magnets underneath the surface and just below a sleek water strip. The promotional video for the company (which was devised to showcase its innovative prowess) will admittedly not lead to a hoverboard for purchase down the road (well, technically not for the “road”) or any further hovering parks. That’s a bummer.
Still, their finished product is pretty damn cool.
Arx Pax and Lexus clearly have the best taste in entertaining cinema and they also understand the wonderful power of dreaming big. We all wanted to travel to “2015” when we saw Back to the Future: Part II in movie theaters in 1989. Besides buying a pair of Nike power lace shoes (later this year!), wearing a power-drying jacket and getting our hands on “Grays Sports Almanac from 1950-2000,” we wanted a hoverboard. As our pop culture-driven scientists are in the alpha stage of developing an anywhere-anytime hoverboard, it’s exciting to be on any path that resides above the ground.
Every life-altering invention started somewhere stuck between limitation and doubt.
And then the future arrives…
Shifting Control
Do you prefer dealing with mechanics in a garage or tech support over the phone?
Interestingly, this may become the question in the not-so-distant future with regards to what kind of car people prefer to drive. Wired Magazine recently conduced a controlled, yet chilling experiment that challenged two computer savvy individuals to attempt to effectively take the wheel of a Jeep Cherokee driven by Wired Magazine employee Andy Greenberg.
The security experts, Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek, accessed the Jeep’s computer brain through its Uconnect infotainment system and rewrote the firmware to plant their malicious code. Once in, the duo began blasting hip-hop through the stereo system, turned the AC to maximum and, ultimately, killed the transmission and brakes.”
—Marco della Cava of USA Today
In a word: scary.
In more words: Isn’t this a big part of what science-fiction movies warn us about?
Advancements in technology can and will be good and bad, but it’s essential we fully understand both consequences of whatever new developments are made. The above instance unnervingly illustrates this point.
A trend throughout the past decade in the auto world (starting with luxury brands) are cars that are increasingly being designed and built with more software and hardware than mechanical parts. The 21st century may be witnessing its defining mark in the evolution of the automobile, for better or worse.
The excitement comes with the necessary navigational system and an impressive interactive control center at the easy and simple touch of the driver and his or her co-pilot. These are great inventions. The caution comes with the realization that a wrench, screws and some gasoline in a small red plastic container are becoming archaic with the modern car. And the fact that a couple hackers (from above) could penetrate a computer system in a popular car should be the latest yellow light of caution aimed at the benefits of technological convenience. Hopefully, this will be a wake-up call to Jeep and its competitors who utilize similar systems.
And yet, at the same time, this should not deter technological innovations.
It’s practically inevitable that a majority of cars in the next ten to fifteen years will be designed with a centralized computer. Will consumers continue and/or start to buy cars that take such a momentous shift and reliance towards technology? Time will tell. Tesla, with its environmental payoffs, sleek features and powerful engine, is basically a giant computer on the inside. Their car models are incredible. The infrastructure is ever-growing, which is critical to its ultimate success. While costs are high now, it’s certainly a company with a bright future if they can control and lower prices for the competitive consumer market.
Tesla’s success down the road would literally (re)define the auto grid.
Computers, in its myriad formats, are here to stay. However, what the startling experiment described above reveals is that patience is required with machines deliberately built for speed.
We use computers everyday, but maybe it’s time we consider (and plan for) how computers use us.
The Artistic Engineering of Class
First, the second viewing of Jurassic World in 3D was a seamless sight for audiences. Similar to Jurassic Park in 3D, this franchise and its cinematography is a perfect fit for this evolving technology.
The build-up for Jurassic World last week and its indominous weekend was validation that this summer blockbuster for the ages delivered as the best follow-up to its untouchable original. Furthermore, in a gracious display of congratulations by the team at Avengers for Jurassic World surpassing its standing as the highest grossing movie over an opening weekend, Marvel made the following picture with a personalized congratulations to Steven Spielberg, Colin Trevorrow, Chris Pratt and others.
By the hammer of a T-Rex that’s cool!
What’s nice is that this creative gesture is a bit of a tradition between box office rivals in Hollywood. Here’s what Steven Spielberg wrote to George Lucas a few decades ago in an issue of Variety magazine.
Those are two killer movie hybrids.

