AI ger Googles ballongprojekt rejäl skjuts framåt

Project Loon – det vill säga Googles ambitiösa satsning på att tillhandahålla internetuppkoppling i svårtillgängliga delar av världen via ballonger – är nu närmare en skarp lansering än någonsin. Detta då framsteg inom artificiell intelligens gjort det möjligt att genomföra testerna med avsevärt färre ballonger än tidigare. I stället för mellan 200 och 400 ballonger kan man klara sig med mellan 10 och 30 ballonger.
Det handlar i grund och botten om möjligheten att navigera ballongerna , något som AI-baserad mjukvara underlättar avsevärt.

 
Project Loon på Wikipedia
Wikipedia (en)
Project Loon is a research and development project being developed by X (formerly Google X) with the mission of providing Internet access to rural and remote areas. The project uses high-altitude balloons placed in the stratosphere at an altitude of about 18 km (11 mi) to create an aerial wireless network with up to 4G-LTE speeds. It was named Project Loon, since even Google itself found the idea of providing Internet access to the remaining 5 billion population unprecedented and "crazy." The balloons are maneuvered by adjusting their altitude in the stratosphere to float to a wind layer after identifying the wind layer with the desired speed and direction using wind data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Users of the service connect to the balloon network using a special Internet antenna attached to their building. The signal travels through the balloon network from balloon to balloon, then to a ground-based station connected to an Internet service provider (ISP), then onto the global Internet. The system aims to bring Internet access to remote and rural areas poorly served by existing provisions, and to improve communication during natural disasters to affected regions. Key people involved in the project include Rich DeVaul, chief technical architect, who is also an expert on wearable technology; Mike Cassidy, a project leader; and Cyrus Behroozi, a networking and telecommunication lead. The balloons use patch antennas - which are directional antennas - to transmit signals to ground stations or LTE users. Some smartphones with Google SIM cards can use Google Internet services. The whole infrastructure is based on LTE; the eNodeB component (the equivalent of the "base station" that talks directly to handsets) is carried in the balloon.
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