Google's Balloons Connect Flood-hit Peru (bbc.com)
An anonymous reader writes: "Tens of thousands" of Peruvians have been getting online using Project Loon, the ambitious connectivity project from Google's parent company, Alphabet. Project Loon uses tennis court-sized balloons carrying a small box of equipment to beam internet access to a wide area below. The team told the BBC they had been testing the system in Peru when serious floods hit in January, and so the technology was opened up to people living in three badly-hit cities. Until now, only small-scale tests of the technology had taken place. Project Loon is in competition with other attempts to provide internet from the skies, including Facebook's Aquila project which is being worked on in the UK. Project Loon recently announced it had figured out how to use artificial intelligence (AI) to "steer" the balloons by raising or lowering them to piggy-back weather streams. It was this discovery that enabled the company to use just a "handful" of balloons to connect people in Lima, Chimbote, and Piura. The balloons were launched from the US territory of Puerto Rico before being guided south.
Project Loon is in competition with other attempts to provide internet from the skies, including Facebook's Aquila project which is being worked on in the UK.
We don't know who struck first, us or them, but we know that it was us that darkened the sky beyond redemption with millions of wireless nodes.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
sounds like a lot of hot air to me
The concept of freely-floating out-of-control balloons serving any purpose is downright loony.
Am I the only one who had trouble parsing that?
> Helium is not exactly abundant here on Earth.
Hydrogen works very well too. It can be generated on site, on demand, using water and electricity or a controlled chemical reaction. Or it can be shipped in tanks like Helium. Hydrogen is used for radiosonde balloons http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstr... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... Given that its payload will be radio gear, there's no worry of a Hindenburg-type disaster. Radio gear is replacable.
I'm not repeating myself
I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
/r/titlegore
And, given that the Hindenburgh disaster was likely due primarily to the fact that the ship was never designed to use hydrogen in the first place*, we could hope that a high-profile project using hydrogen balloons without incident could help to recover their unjustly besmirched name.
*they cut costs on both ends with predictable results - a cheaper helium airship design that didn't have to consider flammability, filled with cheaper hydrogen lift gas...
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
I'm always upset when I see journalists using non-standard units. No one uses tennis courts anymore. Football fields, schoolbuses and milli-Library-Of-Congresses please! (Or, if you live in the UK, Football fields (the other kind), double-decker buses, and fempto-Houses-of-Commons.