Uber plans self-flying drone taxis to beat city traffic
Uber plans self-flying drone taxis to beat city traffic
The Ehang 184, a passenger drone CREDIT: EHANG
By James Titcomb 26
SEPTEMBER 2016 • 10:32AM
If you summon an Uber in 10 years’ time, you will
probably get a car that drives itself. But then again, you may not be
travelling in a car at all.
The taxi-hailing app is working on technology that would
allow airborne passenger drones to fly its users short distances around cities,
it has emerged, raising the prospect of a future in which skylines are dotted
with Uber aircraft shuttling commuters back and forth.
Jeff Holden, Uber’s head of product, told technology
website Recode that the company is researching “vertical takeoff and landing”
(VTOL) technology. Instead of the helicopter-style rotor blade drones, VTOL
aircraft have fixed wings like planes, enabling them to fly silently, while
taking off and landing vertically.
Amazon’s delivery drones, currently being tested in
Cambridgeshire, use a similar technology to cut down on noise and extend their
range.
Holden said Uber wanted to “offer our customers as many
options as possible to move around” and that the technology could be available
within a decade.
“It could change cities and how we work and live,” Holden
said, pointing out that moving traffic from the road to the air could
dramatically cut down on congestion and the time it takes to cross cities. He
said he envisages aircraft taking off from and landing on the roofs of
buildings.
While the idea may seem far-fetched, Uber is not the only
one researching passenger drones. Earlier this year Ehang, a Chinese company,
unveiled the 184, an autonomous quadcopter drone designed to carry a single
passenger, with a battery life of 23 minutes. The 184, which has been slated
for release as early as this year, is expected to cost up to $300,000
(£232,000).
Google founder Larry Page is one of the major believers
in flying cars, putting $100m of his own money into startups developing the
technology.
Comments
Post a Comment