Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Toyota Unveils Super-Compact Car With Location-Based Ads







Toyota Tuesday demo'd its own version of a "smart car." The single-user vehicle, called the Smart INSECT (short for "Information Network Social Electric City Transporter"), uses the company’s COMS ("super-compact electric vehicle") system to create a variety of hands-free features.

[More from Mashable: What It’d Take to Build an Uncrashable Car]


The five-minute demo introduced some of those features, including facial recognition-based locks and verbal directions (like Siri). Users can connect the vehicle to their homes, too, so they can turn off their lights after they've already left the garage.


SEE ALSO: How Much Bird Poop Does it Take to Total a SmartCar?

[More from Mashable: Car Dealership Challenges You to Tweet Your Way to a New Audi]


The vehicle includes one innovative -- and possibly annoying -- new feature: location-based advertising. Whenever a driver passes a restaurant, the vehicle will inform them of the place's deals, which could make driving past mini-malls a noisy ordeal.


INSECT is not going on sale anytime in the near future, though. But maybe, the company hints, we'll see some of the introduced features in future versions of the Camry or Corolla.


What do you think? What features from the INSECT would you like to see incorporated into your car?


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

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