Project loon is google’s potentially world-changing efforts since it could bring millions of people in remote places online for the first time, but many have wondered how the floating, mesh-like network could deliver stable Internet coverage when taking into account factors like wind.
The company says it found inspiration from nature and the way that birds flock together when they fly.
“They [the balloons] look at their near-neighbors and tried to spread each other out nicely,” says ‘Dan’, who on the Rapid Evaluation team at Google. “But as we move forward, we may use methods that take into account everything. So every balloon essentially will have information about what every other balloon is doing. In future, it will probably be a much more sophisticated simulation.”
Dan says that once they found that balloons could be spaced out and intelligent, Loon grew into “a feasible project not just some crazy science project.”
In this video he shows a simulation program that demonstrate how the balloons react to conditions around them and flock to ensure there are no gaps in their coverage.
Loon has been tested in New Zealand, and its expanding to California where Google is seeking volunteers to try out its ground-based modems.
Via: TheNextWeb
Image Credit: foxshuo
The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…
The first time I heard about Bitcoin was in the summer of 2018 during a casual conversation…
Open source software is everywhere—used in almost every modern application—but the security challenges it faces…
Argentine President Javier Milei is facing impeachment after the cryptocurrency he endorsed called $LIBRA crashed…
India is targeting US$500 B in electronics production by 2030. Last year July, Niti Aayog…
The IMF predicts that more Indians will use AI every day than in any other…