Interesting Engineering on MSN
Our flying car future may finally be here
As it turns out, you can actually go out and buy a Personal Flying Vehicle right now. Flying cars, hoverboards, and Jetpacks are all actually legal to fly! However, there are a few catches and still ...
Explore an amazing lineup of cutting-edge innovations in this video! Watch a robot prove its resilience through extreme durability tests, discover the Paladin autonomous drone interceptor, and learn ...
The U.S. Department of Transportation announced this week that flying cars will start flying in U.S. airspace as early as June. Eight regions in the U.S. have been selected for a three-year pilot ...
The federal government announced a new pilot program designed to get new kinds of ultralight vehicles and “eVTOLs” up and running around the country—even if they’re not fully FAA-certified.
The U.S. government is laying the groundwork to enable electric aircraft that take off and land vertically, or eVTOLs, to operate in its airspace. Beginning this summer, in programs spanning 26 states ...
The US government has approved multiple pilot programs that will allow electric air taxis to begin testing across 26 states.
U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy announced eight pilot projects to test Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing vehicles (eVTOL) that’s scheduled to start across 26 states this summer.
The FAA launches groundbreaking pilot program testing electric flying cars and air taxis across 26 states, bringing futuristic transport closer to reality.
FOX 13 Tampa Bay on MSN
Downtown St. Pete to Tampa in minutes? Florida cleared to launch ‘flying taxi’ tests this summer
The future of flying over Tampa Bay may be closer than anyone thought. Florida has been selected as one of just eight nationwide test sites for a new federal program designed to bring electric air ...
The hypothetical questions of “What’s a movie sequel that’s better than the original?” or “Name a sequel that was actually ...
Port San Antonio says the building blocks for so-called “flying taxis” are already beginning to take shape in the city.
A total of 15 middle schools and 20 high schools faced off to see whose builds worked best and who knew the most in a series of testing events.
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