Give Ford credit  for making the rounds on this one; they may not have actually sent  their new Ford Evos out to the IFA show in Berlin, but they did send  their Chief Technology Officer out to talk it up. And what he had to say  about it was impressive enough in its own right.

Basically, what separates the Ford Evos from most other cars  is not its fuel performance, but rather that it’s the first car to be  “connected to the cloud”, or, have a continuous access to data storage.  One of the key things about this cloud connection, or so Ford’s CTO Paul  Mascarenas mentioned, is that it would learn your preferences and  respond accordingly, almost like a car that has cookies.
For instance, in the Ford Evos, it might remember your favorite style  of music, and access it when you drive. Or it may adjust the car’s  performance according to your particular driving style, altering things  like suspension and braking. It may even be able to go sufficiently far  as to monitor your heart rate and temperature and then make adjustments  in the car accordingly.
Personally, I find myself of two minds on this one. While I love a  device that’s capable of performing multiple tasks at once, and this one  definitely looks like the kind of Swiss Army device that makes me very  happy, I can’t help but look at it and think that this is just more  possibilities for things to go wrong. And when it comes to a car, losing  one function is often enough to lose most of the others, including the  all too important one of driving. And what happens when the car goes  into the used market? Do you wipe the cloud clean and start afresh?
So what do you guys think about the Ford Evos? Sound like a good  idea, or an invitation to trouble? No matter how you feel about this  one, head on down to the comments section and let us know just what you  think about it.
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