Google Is Using Light Beam Tech To Connect Rural India To the Internet (techcrunch.com) 67
Google is preparing to use light beams to bring rural areas of the planet online after it announced to a planned rollout in India. From a report: The firm is working with a telecom operator in Indian state Andhra Pradesh, home to over 50 million people, to use Free Space Optical Communications (FSOC), a technology that uses beams of light to deliver high-speed, high-capacity connectivity over long distances. Now partner AP State FiberNet will introduce 2,000 FSOC links starting from January to add additional support to its network backbone in the state. The Google project is aimed at "critical gaps to major access points, like cell-towers and WiFi hotspots, that support thousands of people," Google said. The initiative ties into a government initiative to connect 12 million households to the internet by 2019, the U.S. firm added.
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Me eyes! The goggles do nothing!
Should that not be" Me eyes! The Googles do nothing!
Average IQ on SlashDot is now 110 and dropping (Score:2)
(smacks forehead) (considers whether to be embarrassed to still be on SlashDot)
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"Laser" Tech /Dr.Evil
Is that better?
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>> Light Beam Tech (smacks forehead) (considers whether to be embarrassed to still be on SlashDot)
I wonder if they might also use light beam concentration and focusing technology surface technology to help reception. These would be kept in place using the latest in vertical support mounting technology.
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Nope, you're the only one. And you might be dyexslic.
Whats old is new? (Score:1)
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Grown-ups use the term "Electromagnetic Radiation" since "light" generally refers to the visible portion of the spectrum.
Free Space Optical Communications (Score:4, Informative)
Two big high tech flashlights :), looks like limited distance and fog is a problem. FSOC [wikipedia.org]
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Looks unreliable. (Score:2)
I mean it should be both fast and high capacity but it should also be heavily affected by rain or anything else for that matter that could break line of sight.
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Re: they're really going all out (Score:2)
The local governments do this via subsidized oil, rice, & cooking gas.
What these people need isnâ(TM)t to make ends meet day to day but assistance in raising up the social ladder (do not get me wrong, there are quite a lot of people that need help with day to day).
Historically that would be seats in college, radios, clean water, electricity, bicycles, etc.
Now a days cellphones, internet access, motorcycles, etc.
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And if the Internet connection gives them a means of earning money, then they can feed themselves. With an internet connection and a computer, I could do transcription work, receive requests to grow and deliver food, make textiles/handcrafts, remote education by video, learn technology. If not me, then at least my children.
Better than Microwave? (Score:3)
I read the article. It was short on technical specifics. So I looked it up on wikipedia. Free Space Optical Communications (FSOC) [wikipedia.org].
So what makes them choose this as a better choice than older proven line-of-sight technologies like Microwave radio relay [wikipedia.org]. Microwave formed the backbone of AT&T and MCI long-lines and had enough umph to carry live video. Does the light relay system really have that much more bandwidth than microwave? FSOC looks inferior to me. Shorter distance (a few hundred meters vs hundreds of kilometers for mw and more attenuation with weather (fog, rain).
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Most likely because radio spectrum has a bewildering array of licensing issues pretty much everywhere in the world where there's government. Hardly anybody regulates light spectrum.
I'm... confused (Score:2)
First... 'light beam'? Let me suggest first that they should have said something like 'laser signalling without fibre optic cables'. I dunno, maybe I'm crazy.
Second, it'd be interesting to know what kind of laser - specifically, the particular window of EM they're utilizing. That will have a huge effect on what kind of atmospheric conditions it can tolerate, and how far it's good for. I've gone three links in and still can't find any mention of what frequency range they're talking about. And details on
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IIRC, there was also a commercial system for an IR LED-based WLAN for offices that couldn't run data cabling for some reason... I never heard of it ever being deployed, though.
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>(A properly placed pigeon, blocking the receive aperture, is equivalent to 10-30dB of path loss ... since I know you were wondering
I've worked with microwave systems. A flock of birds could cause the system to fail over to a redundant path.
I could also watch weather fronts move through the region as signal quality dropped then (usually) recovered.
We never had problems with pigeons roosting, though. First, the antennas had covers over them, but second... anything that could manage to cling to those wou
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News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters!
Well this is good news. (Score:1)
Now we need to have a contest to see... (Score:2)
If we can send a book faster by using the clacks or on horseback.
x-clacks-overhead: GNU Terry Pratchett
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Normally you would use a golem for that.
Forrest Mims (Score:2)
Forrest Mims wrote about lightwave transceivers in "Getting Started in Electronics" more than 30 years ago. You could build your own lightwave communications for a few dollars in electronics parts.
Nice to see someone has finally noticed. Also nice is the fact that you can communicate point-to-point without having to worry about licensing and rf interference issues. With lightwave, I don't have to worry about signal crowding simply because of my proximity to other users.
hmm (Score:2)
Very light article (Score:1)
There are plenty of papers paywalled at the SPIE site as well if you'd like to get a better feel on what the state of the art is post the 2012 experiment described in the linked article.
All that said, the environment is your enemy as you go up in frequency - things like clouds, rain (but not always), fog (again, not a
multihop routing (Score:2)