Jetson ONE affordable eVTOL delivers joystick-controlled flight without a US pilot’s license, with top speed limited to 102 km/h (63 mph).
What could be better than strapping yourself into your own personal electric flyer? Racing with some buddies of course, and that's coming closer with the unveiling of the Jetson Air Games concept ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Swedish startup Jetson has made headlines once again as it pushes the boundaries of electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) ...
While Australia's Airspeeder is yet to race its sporty eVTOLs with pilots at the controls, Jetson's founder and CTO Tomasz Patan has taken its One flyer to the air for what's been billed as the birth ...
The Jetson ONE might look like something from a sci-fi cartoon, but beneath its cartoonish facade lies a craft with the credentials to be a practical personal aerial vehicle. The Jetson is a ...
The promise of personal flying machines has been around for decades. From flying cars to jetpacks, the future always seemed to promise a traffic-jam-free ride to work that left the roads far below.
Personal use eVTOL developer Jetson continues to showcase to the public how exciting an aerial eVTOL racing format can be. The company recently showcased a racing format concept it calls the Jetson ...
After seven years of research, development, and then more development, Jetson delivered the first of its single-passenger, electric aircraft to a billionaire tech client in California. It was a long ...