Arab Times

Japan’s ‘flying car’ hovers steadily for minute

Tokyo hopes to use flying cars by 2030s

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ABIKO, Japan, Aug 5, (Agencies): Japanese electronic­s maker NEC Corp on Monday showed a “flying car”, a large drone-like machine with four propellers that hovered steadily for about a minute.

The test flight reaching 3 meters (10 feet) high was held in a gigantic cage, as a safety precaution, at an NEC facility in a Tokyo suburb. The preparatio­ns such as the repeated checks on the machine and warnings to reporters to wear helmets took up more time than the two brief demonstrat­ions.

The Japanese government is behind flying cars, with the goal of having people zipping around in them by the 2030s.

Among the government-backed endeavors is a huge test course for flying cars that’s built in an area devastated by the 2011 tsunami, quake and nuclear disasters in Fukushima in northeaste­rn Japan. Mie, a prefecture in central Japan that’s frequently used as a resort area by Hollywood celebritie­s, also hopes to use flying cars to connect its various islands.

Similar projects are popping up around world, such as Uber Air of the US.

A flying car by Japanese startup Cartivator crashed quickly in a 2017 demonstrat­ion. Cartivator Chief Executive Tomohiro Fukuzawa, who was at Monday’s demonstrat­ion, said their machines were also flying longer lately.

NEC is among the more than 80 sponsor companies for Cartivator’s flying car, which also include Toyota Motor Corp group companies and video game company Bandai Namco Holdings.

The goal is to deliver a seamless transition from driving to flight like the world of “Back to the Future”, although huge hurdles remain such as battery life, the need for regulation­s and safety concerns.

NEC officials said their flying car was designed for unmanned flights for deliveries but utilized the company’s technology in its other operations such as space travel and cyber-security.

Capabiliti­es

Often called EVtol, for “electric vertical takeoff and landing” aircraft, a flying car is defined as an aircraft that’s electric, or hybrid electric, with driverless capabiliti­es, that can land and takeoff vertically.

All of the flying car concepts, which are like drones big enough to hold humans, promise to be better than helicopter­s. Helicopter­s are expensive to maintain, noisy to fly and require trained pilots. Flying cars also are being touted as useful for disaster relief.

US ride-sharing and transporta­tion network Uber is planning demonstrat­or flights in 2020 and commercial operations in 2023, and has chosen Dallas, Los Angeles and Melbourne as the first cities to offer what it calls Uber Air flights.

Dubai has also been aggressive about pursuing flying cars. Japanese officials say Japan has a good chance of emerging as a world leader because the government and the private sector will work closely together.

Artificial intelligen­ce could help LGBT+ people avoid bias in job hiring but the technology is open to “profound abuse”, self-described mad scientist Vivienne Ming said on Thursday.

The entreprene­ur, who once built a computer program that could predict sexuality from a LinkedIn profile, said AI was the perfect tool to liberate — and trap — LGBT+ people.

“Finding difference is almost exactly what deep machine learning is perfect at,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a telephone interview.

“But it’s not the system (of collecting data) that should drive our concern. It’s how it gets used.”

Artificial intelligen­ce is seen as the next frontier by computer scientists, raising hopes for an era when machines can perform tasks with the brain of a human.

But it has also raised fears that AIfuelled machines might exacerbate the prejudices of their programmer­s.

Ming, an AI evangelist who has described herself as a “Profession­al Mad Scientist”, sees high risk in letting impersonal algorithms loose on personal matters.

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