Sunday, 15 March 2015
On
07:51
by
Unknown
No comments
AeroMobil has built a hybrid car and plane that can unfurl its wings and take off when it has a grass runway of about 800 feet. The idea is that someone could take a trip of about 500 miles and not have to switch vehicles, which cuts out waiting in airports. But the company eventually wants to make it so the driver doesn't even have to operate the thing. (As part of the current vision, the person at the wheel would also need a pilot's license for once the vehicle takes flight.)
The company stressed that it's still for now focused on developing the first prototype -- which needs a human at the controls -- but that it wants the next version to be automated. AeroMobil is a finalist at the South by Southwest Interactive Innovation Awards, which will take place Tuesday here, at the tech, film and music festival.
"Maybe 10 years from now, it needs to be automated," said Stefan Vodocz, the company's chief communications officer. "With an algorithm, it would be managed much better by a computer than by man."
Cars are the current fascination of the technology industry. Google is famously hard at work on a self-driving car (an earthbound one) that it wants to take to market in the next five years. Apple is also reportedly developing its own car. Google and Apple also have platforms that bring their mobile operating systems into car dashboards. Meanwhile, Tesla has helped to popularize the electric car.
AeroMobil, which was founded in 2010, unveiled the most current version of the prototype, called the Flying Roadster, in October. The company wants to eventually commercialize the product, and not just leave it in the realm of academic experiments. But AeroMobil knows it has an uphill battle in overcoming regulations and legislation. (Google, for example, has been working with the Department of Motor Vehicles as it tests its driverless car.)
"We need to somehow deal with 100 years of bureaucracy in the air, and 100 years of bureaucracy on the road," said Juraj Vaculik, AeroMobil's CEO.
The company envisions a future where gas stations double as airfields where cars can legally take off. In less-developed countries, AeroMobil hopes governments can spend less on infrastructure like roads. The prototype took 10 months to make, Vadcocz said, though the company wouldn't specify how much it cost to produce.
Vaculik is aware of the challenges but thinks the flying car is an inevitability. He points to a quote from Henry Ford in 1940: "Mark my words: a combination airplane and motorcar is coming. You may smile, but it will come."
source: CNET
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
Search
Popular Posts
-
Gusto, Mailbox, CloudMagic, and Molto make it easy to manage your mail on the go. The Gmail app for iP...
-
BlackBerry may be off the radar among many mobile phone customers these days, but the company wants to remind us that it's still got...
-
Recently I came accross a website in which we can easily trace a Mobile number. For example , when we enter the 10 digit mobile numb...
-
BlackBerry CEO John Chen confirmed two new phones were on their way this year. The first, codenamed "Jakarta," but known as the...
-
Streaming-music service Beats Music is opening up some of its programming to outsiders, with the goal of proliferating the new $120-a-y...
-
The Nexus 6 is a more premium take on the Nexus smartphone. ...
-
Web guru and Android enthusiast Tim Bray has announced he's leaving Google. Why? Because he wants to work from home. "It'...
-
The next battleground for carriers is shaping up to be international calling and text messages. AT&T is the latest to fire a shot, sa...
-
Pirate Bay co-founder Gottfrid Warg has been sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison for hacking into computers and illegal...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Copyright © 2014 Harry Jacks All Rights Reserved. Powered by Blogger.
About Me
Copyright Text
Copyright © 2014 Harry Jacks
All Rights Reserved
All Rights Reserved


0 comments :
Post a Comment