Uber Technologies hopes to one day operate a network of flying cars.
On Tuesday, the ride-hailing company laid out some aggressive plans to get closer to its first flight. Officials in Dallas-Fort Worth and Dubai have signed on to work with the company on testing vehicles that can take off and land vertically in their cities by 2020, Uber said at a conference in Dallas.
The San Francisco company said it's partnering with a handful of aircraft manufacturers and real estate firms, as well as with ChargePoint to lay an electric charging network.
Uber sketched out a clearer vision for its flying taxis at a time when it's struggling with more urgent problems at the ground level.
The company is facing an internal investigation of its work culture, the ongoing search for a chief operating officer to help its embattled leader Travis Kalanick, a core business with mounting losses despite rapid growth and a lawsuit from Alphabet's self-driving car group over alleged theft of documents