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OneWeb Wants To Rebuild the Internet in Space, Connecting Billions Not on the Web
Wednesday February 27, 2019. 03:00 PM , from Slashdot
Later today, the first six of OneWeb satellites are expected to be launched.[Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source] from a remote launch site in French Guiana, a key step toward building out a constellation that could eventually reach nearly 2,000. From a report: If OneWeb's founder Greg Wyler plans are successful, what he and his fellow executives at OneWeb envision is nothing short of revolutionary: becoming one of the world's largest providers of Internet service by building the architecture in space, allowing the billions without access to WiFi to finally use the Web. Wyler founded the British-based company in 2012.
'The ultimate goal is to connect every school in the world, and bridge the digital divide,' Wyler said in an interview after his pep talk. 'We're bringing connectivity and enabling it for people around the world, and in rural populations.' If successful, remote areas all over the world, from Alaska to Africa, that are out of reach of fiber optic cables could suddenly join the world of Google and YouTube, a feat Wyler and others believe could be transformative. But building the backbone of the Internet in orbit is no easy task. Others have tried to put up constellations of communications satellites, only to fail spectacularly. The enormous cost is only outmatched by the risks of putting up hundreds of spacecraft in orbit. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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