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Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Google’s SkyBender aims to beam 5G Internet from solar-powered drones

Google’s SkyBender aims to beam 5G Internet from solar-powered drones

Google
has been testing fifth-generation wireless technology in its unmanned and optionally piloted aircraft at a spaceport in New Mexico as part of a project called SkyBender, according to a report from the Guardian last week. 


It’s all part of a sister project to Project Loon, a venture in which Google has been developing balloons to beam wireless Internet down to offline areas of the globe. Both Project Loon and SkyBender are being incubated by the Google Access team, according to the report. 

Both projects are attempting to fill the skies with aircraft that beam down high-speed Internet to remote and underserved regions.

SkyBender has taken up temporary residence in a hangar at the Virgin Galactic Gateway to Space terminal near the storied White Sands Missile Range in southern New Mexico. A crash that came to light last May revealed that Google was testing solar-powered unmanned drones in New Mexico. 

It appears the drones, designed to stay aloft for up to five years, have progressed past that setback and Google is ready to work on their payload.
Google is experimenting with 5G, a technology that is still not standardised and a few years away from being ready for mainstream adoption.

The brand of 5G Google has been testing relies on millimetre waves. The search engine company has been using drones, acquired along with its acquisition of Titan Aerospace last year, and the optionally piloted Centaur aircraft to beam the millimetre waves to transceivers on the ground. 

While millimetre waves don’t travel as far as 4G phone signals, they can move much more data. Theoretically, millimetre waves can transmit data up to 40 times faster than 4G. 

The industry is still working on the tech to meet the standards, proposed by the Next Generation Mobile Networks (NGMN) alliance, on what 5G looks and feels like. The NGMN hopes the industry will migrate to 5G technologies by 2020.

http://omanobserver.om/googles-skybender-aims-to-beam-5g-internet-from-solar-powered-drones/

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