In 1996, Dieter Gürtler and his colleagues from the Mercedes Technology Center in Sindelfingen, Germany, were looking for a model for a holistically conceived bionic car, respecting at once physics, ...
A software-defined ’70 Bronco, physiological car audio, bionic cooling, Kindle-tech in cars, morphing consoles, and a mobile power grid in a Jeep. This always happens. After spending five days and a ...