Alphabet bets on lasers to deliver internet in remote areas
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[June 26, 2023]
By Jane Lanhee Lee and Nathan Frandino
MOUNTAIN VIEW, California (Reuters) - Google parent Alphabet has already
tried and failed to bring internet access to rural and remote areas by
using high-altitude balloons in the stratosphere.
But now, the company is delivering internet service to remote areas by
using beams of light.
The project known as Taara is part of Alphabet's innovation lab called
X, also nicknamed the "Moonshot Factory." It was initiated in 2016 after
attempts at using stratospheric balloons to deliver internet ran into
problems due to high costs, company executives said.
This time around, things are progressing better, said Mahesh
Krishnaswamy, who leads Taara.
Taara executives and Bharti Airtel, one of India's largest
telecommunications and internet providers, told Reuters they are now
moving toward larger-scale deployment of the new laser internet
technology in India. Financial details were not disclosed.
Taara is helping to link up internet services in 13 countries so far
including Australia, Kenya and Fiji, said Krishnaswamy, adding that it
has struck deals with Econet Group and its subsidiary Liquid Telecom in
Africa, internet provider Bluetown in India and Digicel in the Pacific
Islands.
"We are trying to be one of the cheapest and the most affordable place
where you would be able to get dollar per gigabyte to the end
consumers," he said.
Taara's machine is the size of traffic lights that beam the laser
carrying the data - essentially fiber-optic internet without the cables.
Partners like Airtel use the machines to build out communications
infrastructure in hard-to-reach places.
Krishnaswamy said he had an epiphany while working on the failed balloon
internet project Loon which used lasers for connecting data between
balloons, and brought that technology to the ground.
"We call this moonshot composting," said Astro Teller, who leads X where
he is known as "captain of moonshots."
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A terminal device to deliver internet
with mirrors and lasers created by Taara, a project in Alphabet's
so-called 'moonshot factory' X, is seen in a lab in Mountain View,
California, U.S. June 22, 2023. REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
X is Alphabet's research division that takes on projects bordering
on science-fiction. It gave rise to self-driving technology firm
Waymo, drone delivery service Wing and health tech startup Verily
Life Sciences.
"Taara is moving more data every single day than Loon did in its
entire history," said Teller.
Bharti Airtel's chief technology officer, Randeep Sekhon, said Taara
will also help deliver faster internet service in urban areas in
developed countries. He said it is less expensive to beam data
between buildings than to bury fiber-optic cables. "I think this is
really disruptive," he said.
Krishnaswamy was recently in Osur, an Indian village where he spent
his childhood summers, three hours south of Chennai, for the
installation of Taara equipment. Osur will be receiving high-speed
internet for the first time this summer, he said.
"There's hundreds of thousands of these villages acrossIndia," he
said. "I can't wait to see how this technology can come handy to
bringing all of those people online."
Google in July 2020 committed $10 billion for digitizing India. It
invested $700 million for a 1.28% stake in Bharti Airtel last year.
X and Google are sister companies under Alphabet, while Taara's
partnership with Bharti Airtel is separate from the Google
investment.
When asked about the downside of the internet as X and Taara push
ahead with their mission to connect the rest of the world, Teller
said: "I acknowledge the concept that the Internet is imperfect, but
I would suggest that's maybe the subject of a different moonshot to
improve the internet's content."
(Reporting by Jane Lanhee Lee and Nathan Frandino in Mountain View,
California; Editing by Kenneth Li and Matthew Lewis)
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