In the US alone, nearly two thirds of drivers now want connectivity to be built into their next new car, suggesting that 2016 could be the year when cars take their first real step towards safer, autonomous motoring.
Tesla may have pushed out the ability to abdicate driving responsibility while highway cruising via little more than an over-the-air software update and Audi is currently prepping a Sedan to dazzle the crowds at the International CES this January with its autonomous capabilities. But one thing is clear, 2016 will not be the year that self-driving cars become a real-world reality.
Autotrader has been crunching the data, going through the options lists and examining historical consumer sentiment in order to put together its guide to the best options to select if buying a new car in the year ahead.
The appetite for and interest in subscription-based connected car features is at a new high among the vehicle owning pubic, according to Strategy Analytics.
JATO, one of the world's leading authorities on vehicle sales and data has published a new white paper on current trends and the future health of electric cars to coincide with the LA Auto Show.
A new kind of chemistry could power lithium-air batteries over long-standing technological hurdles, leading toward a product that may one day be strong enough to replace gasoline in cars, researchers said Thursday.
Forget "Back to the Future" and comparing its vision of 2015 with reality, because from watches and wearables to in-car technology, the James Bond films have been correctly guessing the future for over 50 years.