Roger Scoble blogs about the latest gadgets, travel and luxury…
In the design plans for an aircraft billed as the next-generation supersonic jet, passengers would be flown from New York to London in as little as three hours instead of six, and gaze at the sky in windowless cabins. The Spike S-512 will reach international destinations faster than any jet on the market and break the sound barrier at 1,100 miles per hour (1,770 km/hr) — or Mach 1.6 — roughly halving conventional flight times.
And one of the most innovative features of the luxury jet will be the conspicuous absence of windows. Instead, cameras installed on the outside of the aircraft will livestream images back onto high-definition screens that run the length of the inside passenger cabin.
When they want some shut-eye, passengers will also be able to dim the screens or choose their own digital wallpaper from images stored in the system.
All that depends, however, on whether or not the engineers and consultants at Spike Aerospace in Boston can get the project off the ground. The company is hoping to crowdsource $250,000 to fund the second phase of the project, which requires finalizing design details. The deadline to reach their crowdsourcing goal is March 14.
While the removal of airplane windows may have been unthinkable before, the advancements of micro-cameras and flat-screen displays will enable engineers to improve both the flight experience and aircraft efficiency, says Spike: not only will a smooth windowless fuselage reduce aircraft weight, it will also reduce drag.
Roger Scoble blogs about the latest gadgets, travel and luxury news. A graduate of UCLA, Roger loves to travel, drive luxe autos and have amazing adventures.