Passengers on The Zero-G Experience's Boeing 727 learn what it's like to float just like astronauts in space.It's 2022, and we still don't have flying cars. We've got phones that double as portable computers, headsets that put you in virtual deathmatch arenas, machines that can buy and bring us stuff using the power of our voices and movies so real-looking and clear that you can eat off them.
The planes that create these weightless simulations are sometimes called"Vomit Comets," but O'Neill says experiencing an upset stomach or vomiting on these flights is rare. "We try to be as accessible of an experience as possible," he says."We're on the most cost-effective side of the space tourism industry and make it as readily available to anyone."