From Tesla's Autopilot V 2.0 efforts to the recent self-driving towing vision Nissan recently showcased, we are exposed to more and more artificial intelligence driving episodes every month. And while the freshest one, which you can check out in this rendering, is pure fiction, it certainly does quite a lot for the genre, all by making things memorable.
This pixel manipulation somehow manages to take the LaFerrari heresy story one step further, so if you're the kind of aficionado who shrugged when the Prancing Horse came up with its gas-electric hypercar back at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show, you'd better move on to the next story.
Digital artist Khyzyl Saleem provides a vision (we're not sure whether this is a dystopian universe or not) where a LaF is used as a mere... scout.
Perhaps the best way to explain the "drone" part of the title above, which we feel this oddball-grade contraption fully deserves, is to let the young British artist introduce his work.
"This time, an abandoned La Ferrari from the 'Old World' get's given the scout treatment," the Photoshop wielder explains on his Facebook plage.
Until we get to see if such a future remains confined to our displays or not, we'll remind you that Porsche has decided to use a proactive approach, moving one step closer to the drone world. With the German automaker staying true to its motorsport roots, the company recently asked a stunt driver to race a swarm of hunter drones, all with a smokey game twist that can be seen in this story.
Human driving enthusiasts have no reasons to fret, though, as the real-world Ferrari news still involves good old issues such as melted clutches, as we discussed earlier today when bringing you a piece of footage from the 800-car Ferrari parade that took place in Daytona over the weekend.
Digital artist Khyzyl Saleem provides a vision (we're not sure whether this is a dystopian universe or not) where a LaF is used as a mere... scout.
Perhaps the best way to explain the "drone" part of the title above, which we feel this oddball-grade contraption fully deserves, is to let the young British artist introduce his work.
"This time, an abandoned La Ferrari from the 'Old World' get's given the scout treatment," the Photoshop wielder explains on his Facebook plage.
Until we get to see if such a future remains confined to our displays or not, we'll remind you that Porsche has decided to use a proactive approach, moving one step closer to the drone world. With the German automaker staying true to its motorsport roots, the company recently asked a stunt driver to race a swarm of hunter drones, all with a smokey game twist that can be seen in this story.
Human driving enthusiasts have no reasons to fret, though, as the real-world Ferrari news still involves good old issues such as melted clutches, as we discussed earlier today when bringing you a piece of footage from the 800-car Ferrari parade that took place in Daytona over the weekend.