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It doesn't fly or go back in time, but it is a DeLorean. (Credit: DeLorean) Forget the hoverboard . Forget the self-lacing shoes . The ultimate “Back to the Future” fan prop is a DeLorean, the stainless steel machine that zipped around through time. When DeLoreans first went on sale in the early 1980s, they cost around $25,000

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Buy a DeLorean (of sorts) for a mere $5,500

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Chevrolet is already testing its Nascar Sprint Cup racer, the basis for the 2014 SS model. (Credit: GM) It seemed that the progression of automotive engineering would eliminate the rear-wheel-drive car by 2020, but GM believes the architecture still has life enough for a limited production run. Next year the company will make a Chevrolet SS with rear-wheel drive and a V-8. We can only hope a manual transmission might be part of the mix. In the Chevrolet SS announcement, GM noted there has not been a rear-wheel-drive Chevrolet sedan for 17 years

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Chevy SS: Everything old is new again

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The personal mobility Uni-Cub lets people rove around indoor environments, keeping their hands free. (Credit: Honda) Like the Segway before it, Honda’s new Uni-Cub solves a problem that does not exist; it’s a means for able-bodied people to rove around when they could just as well walk. Not to mention looking silly while doing it. The Uni-Cub is the latest iteration of a personal mobility technology Honda previously showed off as the U3-X .

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Honda Uni-Cub promotes our fat, lazy future

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