Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Driverless Becomes Ordinary Cute Fare for Kids

I have to post this new kids book available online just because it demonstrates how ordinary driverless services seem for the generation having children now and for those little ones who are growing up in a world with technology available at every moment.


Moovel Lab is the publisher of Where Do Cars Go at Night? The book invites the reader and the two-to-five year old at his or her side into an idealized world of shared-use, driverless taxi pods that deliver people and groceries during the day, get recharged and maintained at night, do not need much in terms of parking, and are powered by environmentally-friendly sources, all stored in superb batteries. 

I do not know who thought of this, but this book has jumped to the top of my list of favorite children's books. That reminds me: I will add this to the present for the new baby in the family. Our gift will be a nice introductory library of children's classics. Thinking of other transportation-oriented books, such as The Wheels on the Bus and Make Way for Ducklings, as well as a bunch of others that have nothing to do with changing the mind of the next generation about infrastructure and livability.


Apologies for only giving Amazon links instead of small independent booksellers. 

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