M is for Motility
While the dream of jet packs and flying cars hasn’t gone away, our desire for novel ways to bop around the planet is now aligned to the technological prowess and environmental sensitivity of our times. As smart grids are generated by companies such as GE and IBM, and plug-in hybrids, electric and fuel cell vehicles cruise into the mainstream, the transition to distributive, intelligent energy networks is soon to be joined by vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology, signaling the beginning of 21st century transportation designed with future cities in mind. Showmanship of the self-parking Lexus is just the beginning, as urban designer Mitchell Joachim foresees a range of eco-networked, shape-shifting, transological vehicles ahead: Omnidirectional cars that can stand-up, interlock and charge via electromagnetic street induction; Festo-infused vehicles that fit the body’s muscular motion like a baseball glove; and safe, soft-to-the-touch, bump-friendly vehicles that are destined to schmooze. Motility, the ability to move spontaneously and independently, is essential to our species, and like our predecessors in the bacterial and animal worlds, we are born speedsters, inextricably linked to the devices that make us mobile. And while we step onto this magnetic-propelled Maglev train of innovation, it’s certain that our perception of time will move at the speed of an electron, as each one of us glide into the galaxy to explore where no man has gone before.
