Can't wait to drive it on mars really.
You seem the kind of person to like swim in the sewer because its nice cosy "warm".
No sane person would go on a suicide mission to life in extreme inhospitable environment. Religious fanatics seem like some kind of trend.
Rational people enjoy nature, family, company of friends and a jolly good time.
There is already 3 (electric) "cars" parked on the moon, ready to use. How about walking before running?
Cybertruck's competitor on Mars presented by NASAini the next few years we will see many cars with unique shapes appearing
No two ways about it, Its a boom with the homemade flat panel sheet car endeavors.
Hyperloop, aka
Pneumatic tube, capsule pipelines the new thing from 1799.
I personally have seen the system in operation some years back in a hardware (yacht supply) store. The money disappears and the change with receipt returns little later. Internet and credit card put an end to the system.
Lots of citys have Pneumatic trash collection systems operational.
Historical use
1853: linking the London Stock Exchange to the city's main telegraph station (a distance of 220 yards (200 m) )
1861: in London with the London Pneumatic Despatch Company providing services from Euston railway station to the General Post Office and Holborn
1864: in Liverpool connecting the Electric and International Telegraph Company telegraph stations in Castle Street, Water Street and the Exchange Buildings[14]
1864: in Manchester to connect the Electric and International Telegraph Company central offices at York Street, with branch offices at Dulcie Buildings and Mosley Street[15]
1865: in Birmingham, installed by the Electric and International Telegraph Company between the New Exchange Buildings in Stephenson Place and their branch office in Temple Buildings, New Street.[16]
1865: in Berlin (until 1976), the Rohrpost [de], a system 400 kilometers in total length at its peak in 1940
1866: in Paris (until 1984, 467 kilometers in total length from 1934). John Steinbeck mentioned this system in The Short Reign of Pippin IV: A Fabrication: "You pay no attention to the pneumatique."
1871: in Dublin[17]
1875: in Vienna (until 1956)
1887: in Prague (until 2002 due to flooding), the Prague pneumatic post[18]
1893: the first North American system was established in Philadelphia by Postmaster General John Wanamaker, who had previously employed the technology at his department store. The system, which initially connected the downtown post offices, was later extended to the principal railroad stations, the stock exchanges, and many private businesses. It was operated by the United States Post Office Department which later opened similar systems in cities such as New York (connecting Brooklyn and Manhattan), Chicago, Boston, and St. Louis. The last of these closed in 1953.[19]
Other cities: Munich, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Hamburg, Rome, Naples, Milan, Marseille, Melbourne, Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Kobe[20]
1950s-1989: CIA headquarters (now known as the Old Headquarters Building)[21]
Alfred Ely Beach's experimental pneumatic subway on display in 1867