Cars
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4 days agoThe Volkswagen ID. Buzz Gets Bidirectional Charging And Real Buttons
Volkswagen is enhancing the ID. Buzz electric minivan for 2026 with new features, but the U.S. will not receive this model.
The Hyundai Staria Electric is powered by an 84-kilowatt-hour battery that enables a WLTP combined range of 248 miles. It's not based on the E-GMP platform, but it borrows its best feature. This is the Hyundai Staria Electric, a battery-powered minivan that will compete with models like the Volkswagen ID. Buzz and Kia PV5 when it goes on sale later this year in Europe and Korea.
Cars are becoming increasingly electrified and software-defined. This shift in the industry is making the car-making game increasingly attractive to companies that wouldn't have considered making cars a decade ago. Back then, who would've been willing to bet Japanese electronics giant Sharp would announce a car project? Hardly anybody, but that's exactly what the company announced today. Next week, Sharp plans to unveil a concept for its first-ever cara minimalist electric minivan with a price tag it says families can comfortably afford.