What comes after the flying car? A self-flying car
AUSTIN, Texas -- AeroMobil, a startup from Slovakia, is already
making sci-fi lore a reality: the company has made a prototype of a
flying car. But that's not enough for the company. The next thing it has
on its roadmap for the coming decade? A self-flying car.
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 hopes gas stations in the future will double as mini airfields.
AeroMobil
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."
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