Alphabet is shutting down Loon, its Internet balloon project

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,288   +192
Staff member
Bottom line: Loon, the Alphabet subsidiary tasked with bringing Internet access to some of the most remote parts of the world, is shutting down. The project was risky from the get go and ultimately, the team wasn't able to figure out how to make it a commercially viable venture.

Project Loon, as it was originally called, started as a research and development project under Google X back in 2011. With it, Google and parent company Alphabet used high-altitude balloons to create makeshift wireless networks to blanket remote regions with Internet access.

In 2018, the project was spun off as a separate company called Loon LLC.

The issue, as Loon CEO Alistair Westgarth noted, is that “Loon has been chasing the hardest problem of all in connectivity — the last billion users.” Loon tackled a series of “firsts” and solved many problems yet despite finding numerous partners along the way, they still haven’t found a way to get costs down to a level that is sustainable over the long-term.

Astro Teller, head of X, said a small group of the Loon team will be sticking around to ensure the project winds down smoothly and safely. Most of the other employees will be moving on, finding alternative roles at X, Alphabet, Google and elsewhere.

With any luck, Loon's technology can be put to use by other innovators to help further bridge the digital divide around the globe.

Permalink to story.

 
I would love to hear how they came up with a geosynchronous orbit for a balloon, considering the jet stream I would have thought that impossible unless they were going to constantly launch and retrieve balloons ......
 
I would love to hear how they came up with a geosynchronous orbit for a balloon, considering the jet stream I would have thought that impossible unless they were going to constantly launch and retrieve balloons ......
Altitude changes to take advantage of different wind directions, same as free ballooning.
 
Still makes sense as an emergency replacement after hurricane, volcanic eruption, etc - replacing cell towers or internet. Also, could be used to illuminate outside work space (LEDs on the end of the cable/tether).
 
Still makes sense as an emergency replacement after hurricane, volcanic eruption, etc - replacing cell towers or internet. Also, could be used to illuminate outside work space (LEDs on the end of the cable/tether).

Deck of cards can act as an emergency time passer for the whole family, you even get to meet each other ;) :)
 
Back