What hoverboards were meant to be - Yanko Design
Oftentimes life-changing products are offset releases as products of entertainment, to test the waters. Have for instance the VR headset, which was marketed heavily as a gaming device of the hereafter. Now VR and even AR stand up to alter how humanity functions today. Similarly, the hoverboard was never initially released as a commute vehicle. It was touted as a toy with land-of-the-fine art tech that helped it stay balanced and let infinitesimal changes in i's centre of gravity act as controls for movement. Now that the human race is acclimatized to the idea of hoverboards, information technology's here to change how nosotros go from point A to B.
It's for this precise reason the production to a higher place isn't chosen a hoverboard (more synonymous with skateboards), but rather an Electric Residual Car. Designed to get your new mode of transportation (now that the fourth dimension is right), the Electric Rest Machine comes with a carbon fiber body and a foldable pattern that would put almost hoverboards to shame. The Electric Residuum Car is likewise poised to exist the one electric commute vehicle most people will own, regardless of whether their car is electrical or runs on fuel, since the purpose of the Balance Car is to be your last-mile-commute solution. Designed to exist easily carried effectually, and pocket-sized/convenient plenty to fit into about cars or perhaps even strap onto your back, the Residuum Car is what hoverboards intended to be… your new fashion to locomote.
The Electric Balance Car is a winner of the Red Dot Design Concept Award for the year 2017.
Designers: Huang Lin, Lu Heng, Mu Tong, Wang Ruihua & Zhang Bowen.
Source: https://www.yankodesign.com/2018/01/05/what-hoverboards-were-meant-to-be/
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