Google Interested in Wireless Bandwidth Balloons 181
An anonymous reader writes "Google is reportedly looking into investing in or buying a company called Space Data, which provides wireless voice and data services to remote areas with a fleet of weather balloons fitted with transceivers." My mind is sorta tripping over how something like this could work, but I gotta admit that the idea is really cool.
Rural area (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Rural area (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Rural area (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Rural area (Score:5, Insightful)
As long as they're just spamming platforms that last for a day or two, the idea is pretty much doomed. The loss rate is going to be astronomical, and sending guys out in a truck to pick 'em up is in no way cost efficient.
Re:Rural area (Score:5, Interesting)
* Building a balloon that could survive a three-day trip across the Pacific and then automatically drop its warload was technically challenging. Since a hydrogen balloon expands in the sunlight and rises, then contracts at night and falls, the Japanese engineers had to develop a battery-operated automatic control system to maintain altitude. When the balloon descended below 9 kilometers (29,500 feet), it electrically fired charges to cut loose sandbags. The sandbags were carried on a cast-aluminum four-spoked wheel, and discarded two at a time to keep the wheel balanced. Similarly, when the balloon rose above about 11.6 kilometers (38,000 feet), the altimeter activated a valve to vent hydrogen; the hydrogen was also vented if the balloon's pressure reached a critical level.
The balloon had to carry about 900 kilograms (1,000 pounds) of gear, which meant a hydrogen balloon with a diameter of about 10 meters (33 feet). At first, the balloons were made of conventional rubberized silk, but there was a cheaper way to make an envelope that leaked even less. An order went out for ten thousand balloons made of "washi", a paper derived from mulberry bushes that was impermeable and very tough. It was only available in squares about the size of a road map, so it was glued together in three or four laminations using paste derived from a tuber with the Japanese name of "devil's-tongue".
Balloons in warfare [vectorsite.net]
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Initial costs are minimized by having such a cheap deployment cost. Costs are kept down by limiting the battery needs for the device, letting it drift, and having a practical coverage range. If the marginal cost to launch another balloon is only $225 given launch, recover, and mortality, they can quickly adapt to changing needs. Upgrading the network with new technology is about as easy as it gets... just mail out a new set of shoeboxes!
Once you start ad
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My idea! Patent pending! Pay me!
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Realistically, you'll need a team of engineers for a couple of years to develop this so that it's reliable. With the risk of the cost of such a project spiralling out of control as unanticipated problems arise. And the lost opportunity of delaying deployment a couple to several years.
Or you could have one employee with a pick-up tr
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You probably wouldn't mind a few lost packages (they must be cheap for people to take $100 instead of stealing them)
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Why don't we set up these polls that will have the hardware on top!
We just need to space them out nice and evenly, and we wouldn't have to worry (as much) about weather effects. Heck, why limit our selves to just just traditional internet access. I bet I could rig up some sort of portable radio that could make use of these polls.
I could call them PollRadios!
Yah! I am going to make MILLIONS!
So, seriously, what is the point of these balloons? I mean, I could see usages for it where you need
Re:Rural area (Score:5, Funny)
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http://xkcd.com/345/ [xkcd.com]
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Yep indeedee, that would be a Paula Bean Brillant idea, why it wouldn't take more than a pole every 20 miles in wide open spaces to handle that - how many square miles is Texas?.
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rj
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Tethered ballons you have issues with planes running into the lines and coping with the stress put on the line due to high speed winds.
The Internet as a Mesh Network (Score:4, Interesting)
The internet will eventually become a self propagating mesh network. (Case and point: One laptop per child)
Re:The Internet as a Mesh Network (Score:4, Funny)
Zienth
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The begining of the end of nice ping rates (Score:5, Insightful)
Ping rates would go down the tubes.
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Dear Google (Score:5, Funny)
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Sorta like shooting swamp rats back on Dagoba, yeah?
Re:Dear Google (Score:4, Funny)
I was going to correct you but realized that being a pedantic Star Wars nerd is more embarrassing than being an inaccurate one.
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Holy crap! What kind of BB gun do you have that you aren't sure whether a BB gun would wreak as much havoc as a missile launcher?
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"Spawn more overlords"
Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Microsoft is underwriting the development and launch of a communications satellite for Africa. Cameroon: Microsoft Partners With Schools for IT Development [allafrica.com] You can not be more "out there" than that.
It's a Niche Business Model (Score:3, Interesting)
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that doesnt sound like a good idea to me.
at least not if you want to live.
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I wonder what they'll call it? (Score:5, Funny)
"Skynet"
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Of course, there remain one or two technical obstacles...
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That wouldn't be exactly cheap, or even practical. Besides being only applicable in the US.
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Google's day of reckoning coming soon (Score:3, Interesting)
Be sure not to paint 'em red (Score:4, Funny)
If they're carrying data, well, so much the worse...
Whatever colour, we're screwed (Score:3, Informative)
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Only a 24-hour lifespan? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's an awful waste of resources not to mention what happens if someone is transmitting a signal when the balloon in your area pops? How much does all this constant launching and recovering cost compared to just putting in a tower despite the remoteness?
I can see using these balloons for limited times, such as emergencies, or battlefield conditions where there are no cell towers (as the article intimates) but for every day use? I don't think so.
And what is this 'floating gently back down to earth' stuff? Unless they have a parachute, the tranceiver will not be floating gently back down to earth when the balloon pops. It will be plummeting.
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Re:Only a 24-hour lifespan? (Score:5, Informative)
If you make a tear in balloons fabric - it will slowly descend as the helium inside the balloon leaks.
Of course, if you tear balloon apart - it will fall lake a lead weight. But it's rather hard to do.
Re:Only a 24-hour lifespan? (Score:4, Informative)
I spent a year launching weather balloons from Antarctica [gdargaud.net]. They take about one hour to reach 20~30km altitude, then the latex tears up (remember, as the pressure decreases, the volume increases) and the plummet to the ground in less then 10 minutes. In rare cases what's left of the latex will form a parachute shape and they will drop slower.
If you fill them more, they go up faster and blow up earlier (as the latex reaches its maximum thinness earlier). If you underfill them, you get less buoyancy [wikipedia.org], and they can float for a long time if they don't go up to where they'll pop, which is probably what you want here.
But I have to remind you that:
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And they also don't cost much. For example, I found this price: http://him-wettershop.com/ENG_276_EUR_0_722__.html [him-wettershop.com] - 11 euro for a balloon is quite OK. It should be even less if you buy them in quantity.
Helium is expensive, but there are VAST quantities of it. In any case, balloons do not require much of it.
Also, balloons will fly over the clouds, so they can use
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There's a lot of helium in natural gas, but gas companies did not even bother extracting it. With the rising helium prices they are already looking into helium extraction.
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Well, let's speculate on costs a bit.
It's safe to a
Cost Analysis (Score:3, Interesting)
With even the cheapest base station hardware, helium, balloon (at say, $5000 per unit), costs would exceed $14.6M/year per site.
This does not include the labor to continuously manufacturer, transport, and launch equipment.
At a rate of $50/month per subscriber, you would need about 25,000 to break even on base station--hardware alone. This does not include the uplink facility, bandwidth costs, and business administration costs.
I have seen
Re:Cost Analysis (Score:4, Informative)
The coverage should be ~50 mile radius.
To build a base station to do the same thing you would need at least a 300' mast and microwave links between them, plus you have to lease the ground. I don't think you can pull it off with less than a 3-year payback; you also need more prime airwaves.
Sounds unpossible (Score:2)
Hmm. I can't help wondering how something that's worth $100 per day to google isn't worth the finder keeping forever.
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Well, perhaps its identifiable, and contains some kind of locating system that enables the operator to locate it at need, but the $100 reward is just an incentive so that the operating company saves on going out and recovering some of them, so the finder keeping it forever isn't really a viable option.
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According to the article:
Dirt cheap labor, but for how long? (Score:2)
From the article: Recovery missions can get intense. Workers have had to pluck transceivers out of trees in Louisiana, rappel down rocky cliffs in Arizona, trudge through swamps and kayak across ponds. Space Data pays them $100 per transceiver recovered.
"These things can fall anywhere," says Chip Kyner of San Antonio, who once hiked seven miles before finding the transmitter he was look
Re:Only a 24-hour lifespan? (Score:4, Insightful)
How many of the packages can they realistically expect to recover?
"Rural and remote" suggests difficult terrain, dense cover, lakes and ponds, and very few people. I don't think we are talking about the cornfields in Nebraska.
What most puzzles me is why Google wants to enter a market difficult and expensive to service, and with so little prospect of a significant return.
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How many new "clicks" will Google register from North Dakota?
If you are making serious money in the boonies and are shopping for breeding stock or a $45,000 tractor you are probably comfortable with your dial-up ISP or have found a serviceable alternative like satellite broadband.
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The ballons last for 24 hours and new ones are sent up ooevery 12 to 8 hours. So that means
there are always two or three balons up in the air. The way your phone works is that it always
connects to the "best" tower. So when a balloon pop you phone will then connect to the next-best
balloon.
Towers can only be a few tens of feet tall and their service area is small. At the height of
a tower the earth's horizon is only abou
Tom Foolery (Score:1)
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Why not tethered? (Score:5, Interesting)
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If you tether the balloon, the altitude has to be very low or else the cable would be a hazard to aircraft. The whole idea is to put these up so high that they are well out of the way of air traffic. Also, the higher you go, the bigger the area you can cover.
Think of these as cheap, low altitude satellites.
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It almost seemed like a good idea... (Score:1)
Helium Shortage (Score:4, Informative)
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/01/14/0219246&from=rss [slashdot.org]
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You'll be all set.
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Re:Helium Shortage (Score:4, Insightful)
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Liability (Score:2)
From a cute sci-fi sort of view it's "neat-o", but wildly unpractical.
Google has to earn more money (Score:2)
Soon, they'll probably have to get into the hardware biz and compete with companies like Sun, IBM, Apple.
Hmm that brings up the prospect of high end linux laptops, mp3 players, gaming devices, and HDTV's from Google to compete. It could happen. They'll need a top dog designer though.
kinda sorta gotta find a cluebat (Score:2)
Yo! You be trippin' about dis sheeit, but you not be unnerstandin' how fuckin' moronic it make you be lookin', foo. Word.
I speak redneck fluently, too, y'all. It ain't gonna make nobody thank I'm booklarned neither.
The summary was so, shall we say, "unlearned" that I doubt far too seriously that if someone with the lack of communication skills exhibited by the anonymous submitter submitted it, t
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Lies! (Score:2)
Techdirt claims it (probably) ain't so.
About the balloons... (Score:2)
To the US Government... (Score:2, Funny)
Alt:~25-30Km, Coverage:~500Km with 802.16* (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a possible reality.
http://www.worldskycat.com/markets/skycom.html [worldskycat.com]
A few more URLinks on Modern AirShip Technologies (Score:2)
http://www.aerosml.com/galleryML866.htm [aerosml.com]
http://www.dezeen.com/2007/12/11/aeroscraft-ml866/ [dezeen.com]
http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/air_space/4242974.html [popularmechanics.com]
http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/systems/haa.htm [globalsecurity.org]
Airships are the way to go. (Score:2, Insightful)
These airships could serve multiple purposes (among many others I'm sure Google's clever folks could come up with):
- Photography for Google Maps.
- Airvertising as another revenue source.
- Weather.
no one has posted? (Score:2)
IP over Avian Carriers?
Re:Scott Draker interview about CmdrTaco's faggotr (Score:2)
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The cost of the ground, among other things.