The craft integrates a range of advanced technologies, including embodied intelligence, biomanufacturing, quantum technology and 6G communications, according to the company.

That looks something Scrooge McDuck would fly on late 80’s to early 2000’s comics.

@yogthos “World’s first”? The effect was known since the 1930s and in 1975: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lun-class_ekranoplan

If I remember right the USSR had all kinds of strange for the time vessels designed and built for use in the Caspian and Sea of Asov.

Smuuthbrane
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72h

How is this a first in any way? Ground effect vehicles have been a thing for decades.

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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31h

Perhaps they mean commercially produces ones. To my knowledge these have never gone past experimental prototype stages.

@[email protected]
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Russia had a maritime ground effect vehicle that was used as a ferry… decades ago.

This seems like the constant Android vs iPhone feature claims of

brand new never before seen! Except on your competitors flagships half a decade ago

@yogthos

Russians were doing that 50 years ago.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lun-class_ekranoplan

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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41h

true, but only as prototypes that never went into mass production

Ground effect vehicle? What’s that?

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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101h

Ground effect vehicles are basically airplanes that are forced to fly really, really low. They take off from water and cruise just a few meters above the surface. At that altitude, the air gets compressed between the wing and the ground or water, which creates a huge cushion of extra lift. This lets the vehicle carry way more weight than a normal plane of the same size and power, making it incredibly efficient for hauling cargo over water. The trick is that it only works over flat surfaces like oceans or lakes, and the piloting can be tricky because you’re skimming the waves at high speed without actually being able to climb to a higher altitude. It’s a neat piece of engineering that trades operational flexibility for raw lifting power.

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That’s pretty cool. The article did not explain that and I stopped reading halfway through. I imagine many readers were confused.

2nd

Caspian Sea Monster

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