5 Trends At The LA Auto Show That May Change How We Move

The Infiniti QX50 Crossover is displayed at the 2017 LA Auto Show in Los Angeles. The car features a new engine that shows automakers are still finding ways to improve the gasoline engine, even as electric vehicles are gaining in popularity.
Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
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Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
There’s more than cars at an auto show.
Auto shows are not only a place for consumers but for vendors, executives, reporters, activists, investors and consumers. They are more like conventions. With 10,000 parts on a car, that means a lot of vendors.
This year’s LA Auto Show definitely had its stand out cars. Jeep redesigned the Wrangler. Volkswagen’s latest entry in the electric car world seems aimed at Tesla. Porsche’s fans were all abuzz about word of plug-in hybrid 911.
All these cars and concepts were cool, but there wasn’t some game-changing technology that was introduced to overtly change the world (car CEOs nowadays often ape the tech world bombast). Walk around the show and you’ll find some technology and advances that aren’t necessarily sexy but are changing the way we move around.
Baby you subscribe my car
Economists and sociologist have been talking about consumers beginning to prefer access instead of ownership. The newest car subscription services are the industry’s long-awaited answer to car sharing services. Book By Cadillac costs about $1,600 a month, including insurance and maintenance, and you can get any Cadillac. Book was introduced in New York this year, and is coming to Los Angeles, with a national launch pending.
Volvo announced its own service for its XC-40 crossover and there’s a similar service from the struggling Lincoln brand.
“Lincoln and Volvo’s moves to new vehicle subscription services are reflective of a broader shift we’ve been seeing across the industry as sales decline,” says Jessica Caldwell with Edmunds. Automakers “appear to be more open to exploring new business models.” It’s an attempt to make their brands stand out and keep more customers while also grabbing market share from the competition, she says.
ICE ICE baby: New twists on the internal combustion engine
As cool as the slew of hybrid, all-electric and other alternative fuel vehicles are, we still live in the world of the gasoline engine. While the internal combustion engine is the Rodney Dangerfield of the car world (“I get no respect!”), engineers continue extraordinary innovation.
Karl Brauer with Cox Automotive points to the Infiniti QX-50’s new variable compression engine as sign of the leaps being made. “It allows you to get more performance when you need it and more fuel savings,” he says.
In addition, there’s Mazda new compression-ignition engine, which represents a leap forward in fuel efficiency. Brauer says this innovation could keep the internal combustion engine around for a lot longer. “They keep making electric cars and even hybrid cars seem a little better and then that damn internal combustion engine evolves again,” he says. The constant innovation of the “boring” ICE is what keeps its lead “in terms of cost versus efficiency,” he adds.
Build a better map
As we look toward a world where computers drive cars, maps and map technology become more important. Google Maps, Microsoft and Tom Tom don’t just provide maps for your phone but for automakers and various other industries that need them.
One of the smaller companies that’s trying to change the mapping space is what3words. It creates addresses that make sense to both computers and humans.
“Think of how frustrating it is when you call an Uber and you spend 10 minutes trying to find each other,” says company executive Clare Jones. “Try to find Juarez Street in Mexico City,” she jokes. That’s because the city has more than 600 streets with that name.
The company has divided the world into a grid, with trillions of 10-foot squares. Each square gets a three-word name. “The computer wants to hear longitude and latitude, and people don’t think that way,” Jones says. The point of such services is to make it easier for the transition to autonomous cars.
My bicycle: Personal transport
As the big car companies’ race toward the electric and self-driving future, there’s growing competition for the personal transportation world. Think everything from skateboard to three-wheeler. There is intense demand for small personal conveyances. Companies such as Micro Kickboard, Razor USA, Propella Electric Bikes, and the foldable scooter Urb-B were some of the exhibitors.
The $899 URB-E Sport foldable electric vehicle includes a removable battery that can charge up to five devices simultaneously.
Daniel Seman
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Daniel Seman
Current motorcycles and mopeds use gas or diesel and often have lower fuel economy and high soot output which contributes to air pollution and greenhouse gases. These new electric alternatives could aid in cutting pollution in major cities around the globe.These companies are aiming at the what’s called “the second commute” — the trip from the train station to the office, for example.
These new vehicles currently appeal to the young, but they could help provide mobility or ease transportation for older and disabled people. The hope of many in this mini-industry is that as cars go autonomous the roads will get safer for smaller vehicles.
Saturday Sports: Tiger Woods And Eli Manning
Tiger Woods is attempting yet another comeback and Eli Manning will not start for the first time in 13 years.
SCOTT SIMON, HOST:
And now it’s time for sports.
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SIMON: Eli Manning’s streak of consecutive games is scheduled to come to an end tomorrow. But in golf, Tiger Woods might be back again. NPR sports correspondent Tom Goldman joins us. Tom, thanks so much for being with us.
TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: Scott, thanks for having me.
SIMON: (Laughter) And Tiger’s looking like he can play golf again, isn’t he?
GOLDMAN: You know, he certainly doesn’t look like a nearly 42-year-old man returning from his fourth back surgery. In his first competitive golf in almost a year, he has shot two straight rounds in the 60s. He’s swinging free and hard. He’s hitting the ball far. He’s chipping and putting. It looks solid. Granted, Scott, this tournament he’s playing in is a nice, little cushy event hosted by him in the Bahamas. It only has 18 players, although many of them are the world’s top-ranked guys.
SIMON: It’s his own – he’s hosting his own event? Surely, that’s stacking the deck, isn’t it? But go ahead. Yeah?
GOLDMAN: (Laughter) No, no, no. I mean, everyone has a shot. There is no cut after two rounds, so it’s not the pressure cooker of a regular PGA Tour event. But he led for a time Friday. Going into today, he was five shots behind the leader. And Tiger Mania (ph) is growing. There’s so many people who are so eager to see him do magical things on the golf course again.
SIMON: He’s had a lot of back trouble, as you note – four surgeries – and, to be sure, personal trouble, much of his own making. But he’s only 41, 42. He could have some very strong years – tricky as backs are – couldn’t he?
GOLDMAN: Yeah. Well, he could. You know, a few. Backs are very tricky, especially with violent torquing golf swings like Tiger’s. And we should note that he played this event last year. He did really well – raised expectations like he is now. And then in a couple of events after that, his back deserted him. He did play golf for nine straight days before this event began to get his back and his body and his mind ready. After two really good rounds, the back appears to be holding up. He said he took some Advil during the round yesterday not because he was hurting but because of his surgeon’s orders. So we shall see. If he can stay healthy, 2018 could be a fascinating year on the Tour.
SIMON: Yeah. Eli Manning doesn’t start tomorrow – New York Giants against the Oakland Raiders – ending a streak of 210 regular season games at that number. Now, the Jints have had a miserable season, but is Eli Manning the reason?
GOLDMAN: Well, he’s not the entire reason. It’s always – you know, it’s a team failure. But yeah. You look at a few key stats, and Manning doesn’t appear to be the guy who led the Giants to two Super Bowl titles in the last nine years. You know, perhaps it was time to move on.
But it’s the way the Giants did it that has appalled many fellow players and fans. He was told he could keep starting the final games of the season to keep the streak alive but that he’d come out of games so the team could take a look at his backups. He wanted none of that. He said that was more about chasing hollow numbers than competing.
SIMON: Yeah. The NFL’s been dealing with social actions and protests this season. They announced a social action plan initiative of their own this week. What do you see in it?
GOLDMAN: It’s a response to the player protests begun by Colin Kaepernick last season, which, you know, multiplied this season. The NFL reportedly will put up about $90 million over seven years for social justice programs – programs that deal with improving education, community police relations, the criminal justice system. Some players still are suspicious of this and say the league is trying to buy its way out and get players to stop protesting. But there are a lot supporting the plan. And at the very least, this appears to be a step in a good direction.
SIMON: NPR’s Tom Goldman, thanks so much for being back with us. Talk to you soon.
GOLDMAN: Always a pleasure, Scott.
(SOUNDBITE OF SPEEDOMETER SONG, “TROUBLED LAND”)
Copyright © 2017 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.
Children's Health Insurance Program In Jeopardy In Colorado
Colorado contacted families who receive CHIP health care funding with a warning that support might end in January. NPR’s Scott Simon talks with Gretchen Hammer, who runs the Colorado program.
SCOTT SIMON, HOST:
Come February, 75,000 families in Colorado might lose health insurance for their children. That insurance comes through the Children’s Health Insurance Program, or CHIP. And that program pays for health care for children, mostly from working-class families whose parents make too much to receive Medicaid. The program is funded by Congress, but Congress has let that funding expire. States have been using extra funds to try to get by. Now half a dozen states are close to running out of those federal funds, including Colorado.
Gretchen Hammer directs Medicaid in Colorado. She oversees CHIP there. Ms. Hammer, thanks very much for being with us.
GRETCHEN HAMMER: It’s a pleasure.
SIMON: Please help us understand how CHIP funding normally works.
HAMMER: So the federal government pays a portion of the costs of the CHIP program, and states pay the other portion. Right now the federal government pays 88 percent of the costs of the CHIP program in the state of Colorado. And the state, through a variety of different funds, pays for the other 12 percent.
SIMON: And that money’s about to expire?
HAMMER: Yes. The federal financing for the CHIP program expired on September 30. States have the authority to continue to spend federal dollars that they had not spent. And so we anticipate that we’re able to continue to spend those currently allocated dollars until January 31. But after that, there will be no additional federal money for us to continue to operate the program.
SIMON: Unless Congress changes that.
HAMMER: That is correct. Congress can act at any time to reauthorize funding for the program at a national level.
SIMON: What would be the effect of losing that funding be in your state?
HAMMER: So at this point in time, we’re anticipating that we would need to close the program. With such a significant federal investment, it is really difficult for states to find the needed resources to continue the program without any federal financing. So we have notified families and have been preparing the different parts of the program to cease operations on January 31.
SIMON: When you use phrases like close the program and cease operations, I mean, does that mean children will no longer be able to get health care?
HAMMER: Well, what we’re hoping is that families, with enough notice, will be able to look at other options for their children. Some children may be able to get onto their parents’ employer-sponsored coverage. There is also the chance to shop on the state-based marketplace. And some may be able to receive tax subsidies to help support the affordability.
SIMON: But it sounds like a lot of other people would have no alternative.
HAMMER: There is a chance that families may not be able to find something that is affordable.
SIMON: And what happens to the health care system in Colorado if February comes, and there are – I don’t know – thousands of Coloradans who have to come to the hospital, but their care won’t be funded?
HAMMER: It is certainly a concern, and it would be the same thing that happens, unfortunately, today when an uninsured child or uninsured pregnant women has to access services. The hospital and the care provider work with that family. And to the extent that they need to, they become financially responsible for the services that they’ve received.
SIMON: Do you hope Congress re-ups the CHIP program?
HAMMER: We certainly believe that the CHIP program has been very successful. It provides peace of mind and coverage for families, for their children and certainly for pregnant women. The CHIP program in Colorado, and I think nationally, has traditionally enjoyed bipartisan support. It’s been proven to be very effective. And we’re hopeful that Congress will act.
SIMON: Gretchen Hammer directs Medicaid and CHIP in Colorado. Thanks so much for being with us.
HAMMER: It’s been a pleasure. Thank you.
(SOUNDBITE OF RRAREBEAR’S “ESSENCE”)
Copyright © 2017 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.