Drones

Facebook successfully tests its internet-beaming drones

Facebook successfully tests its internet-beaming drones
Facebook has successfully tested its internet-beaming drones in the UK
Facebook has successfully tested its internet-beaming drones in the UK
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Facebook has successfully tested its internet-beaming drones in the UK
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Facebook has successfully tested its internet-beaming drones in the UK

Mark Zuckerberg's plans to use unmanned drones to provide internet connections appear one step closer to reality. The Facebook CEO today revealed that his Internet.org initiative has put the aircraft to the test for the first time, describing the operation as a success.

Zuckerberg first unveiled his vision for flying wireless internet access points in March last year. The aim of Internet.org is to use solar-powered, internet-beaming aircraft flying over remote communities to connect parts of the global population that don't currently have internet access.

In a Facebook post this morning, Zuckerberg revealed that the Internet.org aircraft have been successfully tested in the UK. Indicating that it is still under development, he says the finished aircraft will have a wingspan greater than a Boeing 737, but still weigh less than a car. It will be capable of flying at an altitude of 60,000 ft (18,288 m) for months at a time.

"Aircraft like these will help connect the whole world because they can affordably serve the 10% of the world's population that live in remote communities without existing internet infrastructure," Zuckerberg writes.

And Facebook isn't the only company with high-flying internet aspirations. Last year, Portuguese company Quarkson announced its SkyOrbiter program that plans to use UAVs to transmit internet access "to every corner of the world," while Google has floated the idea of using balloons with its Project Loon and is continuing testing of the concept having just successfully sent a balloon on a 20,000 km (12,400 mi) trip from New Zealand to Australia – the long way around.

Sources: Facebook, Project Loon

2 comments
2 comments
Bill Brewer
This concept was pioneered by the Scaled Composites Proteus and Angel Technologies HALO project in the late 90's. Although Angel Technologies folded, it is nice to see the concept taken to fruition. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaled_Composites_Proteus.
Don Duncan
My dream is to see an independent net incapable of being censored. Now only governments communicate freely. Who will regulate the regulators? I say stop supporting regulation/regulators and let the free market decide who survives.