Wi-Fi From The Sky
Makarand writes "Some companies think that the answer to providing ubiquitous
broadband access is to have telecom gear float high in the sky.
High-tech blimps, called Stratellites, could be used by ISPs to carry
their telecom equipment as high as 13 miles, far above commercial
air traffic and turbulent weather
according to this article on
ABC News. At this height the Stratellite
could serve an area of around 300,000 sq miles. Subscribers will
merely need to put a small antenna outside and get broadband.
The Stratellites will be perfect spheres and carry all electronic
equipment within the Kevlar fabric and will not have any external
fins or gondolas attached. Companies are already developing
Wi-Fi sytems that could operate over tens of miles and these
systems could be used on these Stratellites."
ATG came up with a similar idea some time ago - doesn't look like they've got as far as a prototype yet tho - their design is a more usual blimp shape rather than spherical mind ...
...
ATG
Personally, I'd love one of their large Skycat's - imagine a beo.. I mean it'd make a great house
If you look on the web site of the manufacturer you can find this picture where it is clear that those things on the side of the sphere are combination propeller/stearing vane modules.
:)
BTW does anyone else think that the picture on their front page makes the thing look like the Death Star (tm)
-jon
You can't use cell phones in flight not because it might interfere with the avionics of the airplane, but because it costs the cell phone companies too much money to have you hopping to a new tower every two seconds.
If cell phones were really dangerous in ANY way to an airplane in flight, do you think they'd be allowed?
"Moderate drinking can help prevent amputated limbs" -- Abigail Zuger, NYTimes, 12/31/02
Some more links on the story itself:
I think for proper stationkeeping of these communications balloons they're going to have to fly them even higher--as high as 75,000 feet.
There are two reasons for this: 1) the jet stream has strong winds even in the 60,000 feet range; and 2) some thunderstorms have cloudtops as high as 65,000 feet!
There was another company looking to piggy-back on the National Weather Service's twice-daily balloon sounding probes to provide cellular service in unserved areas. The latex balloons climb to extreme altitudes, and then often hang for 24 hours or more without moving much (according to the article) before bursting. If the relay balloons float at similar altitudes, they would require little power for stationkeeping.
Big deal, you bar air traffic from the area. We may soon be doing the same to generate electricity, with tethers perhaps 3 miles long; check out gyromills for a jolt to your weltanschauüng. Have you looked at the balloons used to loft cosmic-ray, infrared and the cosmic-background radiation experiments lately? Boomerang flew at 120,000 feet, thus requiring a balloon several times the volume required to loft a payload to a mere 65,000 feet. There is a lot of established expertise, and while this can't be considered a trivial exercise it isn't going to require much new work.Scientists restrict study to entire physical universe; creationist