
Shelby GT500 Wireless Road
Mice - $54.95 | All Ford
Road Mice
Psst, is your Dad a Shelby lover? Here's the pefect Father's Day gift: the Shelby GT500 Wireless Road Mice computer mouse from the NeatoShop.
The 2.4 GHz USB wireless mouse, compatible with both PC and Mac, lets your favorite car lover cruise the web in style. Best of all, it doesn't cost you $40K to get one!

Ford
GT Red/White Stripes - $58.95
We've just gotten our shipment of Road Mice, the wireless computer mouse shaped like your favorite cars! These puppies are gorgeous - and come complete with functioning headlights and smooth lines that give it a realistic car look and feel (except, you know, they're tiny!)
To sweeten the deal, we've added our Christmas Special Mystery Bonus to these items. Every purchase of the Road Mice computer mouse will come with a free Mystery Bonus.
The Road Mice will make the perfect Christmas gift for the car lovers in your family. Quantities are extremely limited - in the past, we've sold out of these in just a couple of days, so get yours now: Link (scroll down)
Ford is developing a seat belt that inflates when the car detects a crash. In The Wall Street Journal, Matthew Dolan writes:
Its inflatable rear seat belts spread crash forces over five times more area of the body than conventional seat belts, said Sue Cischke, Ford group vice president of sustainability, environmental and safety engineering
Each belt’s tubular air bag inflates with cold compressed gas, which flows through a specially designed buckle from a cylinder housed below the seat. The inflatable belt’s accordion-folded bag breaks through the belt fabric as it fills with gas, expanding sideways across the occupant’s body. It looks something like a water wing children wear in the pool before they know how to swim.
Link via Popular Science

Behold a new prototype dashboard by Ford in collaboration with Smart Design (the designer for the super-easy-to-use Flip camcorder) for their new breed of "green" cars.
The dashboard gives drivers a "wealth of info" without confusing or distracting them. And when Ford researchers tested the new design, they found that drivers get obsessed with achieving a "high score" of getting the highest fuel efficiency:
In order to play into the research finding that drivers are looking for a high score when it comes to fuel efficiency, one high-resolution LCD screen on the dash features an eye-catching rendering of curling vines blooming with green leaves. It’s more than a decorative element; it’s a data-visualization tool intended to change the way people drive. If a driver wastes gas by aggressively accelerating or slamming on the brakes, for example, the vine withers and leaves disappear. More leaves appear if individuals drive more economically.
Matt Vella and Reena Jana of BusinessWeek have more on the story: Link – via Information aesthetics
I applaud Ford for trying to innovate, but as I write this post I distinctly remember driving in Los Angeles and finding a brand new Ford Mustang living up to the acronym Found On Road Dead, still with dealership plates and price tags (seemed that it was being taken for a test drive), broken down on the side of the road. I don’t think the customer bought the car …

