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Facebook to “beam internet” to developing world with wi-fi drones

Facebook plans to “beam internet to people from the sky” via a fleet of drones satellites and lasers, in a new project that will rival Google’s Wi-Fi balloon scheme ‘Project Loon’.



Facebook’s Connectivity Lab will aim to give suburban populations access to Internet service from gear in planes continually circling about 20,000 meters overhead.
The planes would fly above the weather and, powered by the sun, could remain in the sky for months at a time.
The team at the lab comprises experts in aerospace and communications technology, including former members of the NASA Jet Propulsion Lab and Ames Research Center, according to Facebook.
We’ve been working on ways to beam Internet to people from the sky,” Facebook co-founder and chief Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on the leading social network.
The team at the Connectivity Lab builds on a quest by Facebook-launched Internet.org to make access to basic online services available everywhere on the planet.
“Connecting the whole world will require inventing new technology too,” Zuckerberg said.
“That’s what our Connectivity Lab focuses on, and there’s a lot more exciting work to do here.”
And it just added talent from a Britain-based startup behind long-flying solar powered, unmanned aircraft.
The lab is looking at varying tactics to achieve its mission. For remote regions or spread-out populations, the team is interested in using satellites orbiting the Earth.
Watch this video explaining how the service will work below:

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