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Winner, best name in show. Take a commercial stepvan and replace a side panel with glass, and this truck is your mobile recording studio. At 75 inches tall, it also accepts a large reflector telescope. Or, you can stow up to three kayaks and ancillary equipment. See, there's no end to what you can do with Funkybox.
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It looks like a Renault on the outside, but inside, front seats stow away to cover the dash and rear seats fold under the floor, transforming Z-E-N into a Japanese living room. Reversible straw/bamboo matting covers the floor and the lower panel of the tailgate slides and lifts up like a Japanese paper door, revealing an outdoor view. Can you say "feng shui?"
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If you think the PT Cruiser looks like a "gangster car," check out the three porthole windows in the Hideaway's landau-style C-pillar. Powered by an 1.3L I-4, the Mazda features an engine starter button, pushbutton automatic transmission, and freestyle seating within an interior that focuses on individual details and personalized components.
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The slug-shaped antithesis to George Jetson's car-in-a-suitcase, this concept adapts living room design to a luxury coach. Open the "suicide" doors and storage units fold out of the interior door linings. Shelves and immense storage bins turn the four-seater into a roomy den with generous armrests. It has power-swiveling front buckets, flat floor, and integrated computer with keyboard. The drive-by-wire steering wheel can be placed left or right, and it folds into the dash with the instrument panel when parked. The daring design portends of a future production model, likely for 2004.
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Another telematics-enhanced car, its roof pattern resembles a net (Internet -- get it?). The interior features tiny cameras and Web connections galore. Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn says it's "in a sense, a mouse that you do not control by your fingertips, but with a steering wheel in the environment around you." Er, okay.
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The crazy offspring of last-decade's Nissan Ghobi pickup, Nails is an urban-style truck, straight outta "Blade Runner." The rear window is a split roll-up plastic curtain, but the interior is high-tech, with all the latest telematics.
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"Make it unique!" was this GM partner's show theme, and the Covie sure tries. Powered by a GM-based hydrogen fuel cell electric motor that "interacts" with household appliances, the orange egg "expresses healthy enjoyment and brightness in everyday life." Why not?
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Stands for "Dual Mode Traveler." This 191-inch-long, nearly 80-inch-tall van's two modes are "drive mode," which emphasizes the modern, electronic gizmo-encrusted two-seat driving space, and "stay mode," which features a beautifully finished camper area in back fitted with gear that looks like Hammacher Schlemmer meets L.L. Bean. Nice idea, too bad about the nose.
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"Take fun to the max!" was Honda's theme, and that doesn't even begin to describe this 4-cyl. IMA hybrid-powered, self-contained SEMA show. Unibox's clear body panels are for painting on, or they can be replaced with panels of other materials and textures. Seats in this six-wheeled box can be rearranged around the flat floor. Steering is by joystick, and like many of the concepts here, the leather-and-wood accented interior is filled with cameras, a nav system, TV, and other electronic goodies. Two fold-up electric cycles, the Mobimoba and the Caixa, fit behind the module panels, and there's room for a nav-equipped shopping cart in the cargo space, all charged by the on-board generator.
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Not enough passion in your Camry? Sony teamed up with Toyota to design the Pod, a car that can read your emotions and account for them. Its two headlights have eyelids and tears, and the u-shaped LEDs on the panel between them change color to represent "happy," "sleepy," "sad," and "angry." Inside, four tall chairs swivel to "welcome," "communication," and "drive" modes and a handheld Sony device determines your mood and adjusts the car's attitude accordingly, by selecting the interior lighting and music. It gets better: just below the backlight of this motorized mood ring, which looks like a big four-door BMW Isetta, is a tail that wags at you when you're ready to drive, or wags at other motorists when you pass. Makes the Begin Funkybox look downright subtle, doesn't it?
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