Facebook’s flying-internet efforts mirror a similar project that’s underway at Google.
The Facebook founder, Mark Zuckerberg, is putting together a lab
where a team of Facebook engineers will build flying drones, satellites,
and infrared lasers capable of beaming internet connections to people.
Mr. Zuckerberg on Thursday revealed the project to be known as the Facebook Connectivity Lab.
According to Mr. Zuckerberg, the lab’s engineering staff already
spans “many of the world’s leading experts in aerospace and
communications technology,” including researchers from NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Lab, NASA’s Ames Research Center, and the National Optical
Astronomy Observatory.
The company is also now adding engineers from a British company
called Ascenta, an outfit that helped create the world’s longest
solar-powered unmanned aircraft.
All this may seem like a stretch for a social networking company. But
it’s a necessary part of Mr. Zuckerberg’s efforts to bring the internet
to the vast parts of the world that still don’t have it, an effort
known as Internet.org. This appears to make sense for a company whose
continued expansion depends on the continued expansion of the internet.
Facebook’s flying-internet efforts mirror a similar project that’s
underway at Google. Known as Project Loon, it seeks to provide internet
access to the hinterlands through high-altitude balloons. Like Facebook,
Google stands to benefit in big ways if the internet expands. The
original services built by these two web giants are now used by enormous
swaths of the online population, and eventually, the companies must
push into an entirely new audience. As public companies, they’re under
enormous pressure to continue the growth of their businesses — in
perpetuity. In addition to Loon, Google is looking to expand the reach
of high-speed internet landlines through a service called Google Fiber.
According to a post on Internet.org, the new Facebook lab is
exploring the possibility of using solar-powered high-altitude planes to
provide internet access in suburban areas. These could “stay aloft for
months, be quickly deployed and deliver reliable internet connections,”
the site says. Then, for more remote areas, the lab is looking towards
low-orbiting satellites. In both cases, it aims to beam internet access
to the people using what’s called free-space optical communication, or
FSO. Basically, this is a way of transmitting data through infrared
lasers.
Facebook’s announcement came two days after the company acquired a
startup called Oculus, saying it would use the startup’s gaming headset
as a way of moving its social network into the world of virtual reality.
Compared to that, the Connectivity Lab is a rather straightforward
business move. On Tuesday, while discussing the Oculus buy, Mr.
Zuckerberg painted both projects as platforms that represent not the
near future of Facebook, but the distant future.
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