Use drones to provide internet services? Unfortunately, Google and Facebook did not make it.

This scenario sounds like science fiction: automated solar-powered drones can hover in the air for weeks or months at once, providing high-speed Internet connectivity to areas of the Earth that have not yet reached the network. This was once the lofty ideal of Google, which established a company called Titan Aerospace in 2014. Google hopes to help a large number of users access the Internet for the first time through this type of Internet connection. However, Titan did not exist long. After Google reorganized the Alphabet, the Titan project was merged into Google Labs Google X. The company is responsible for exploring some crazy ideas or projects that are unlikely to be implemented. Later, the Titan project merged with Wing, another drone project under Google X. The latter focused on the use of drones for parcel delivery projects. According to Google X, the company confirmed that it had halted the Titan project last year and redistributed some of its employees to other departments. Use drones to provide internet services? Unfortunately, Google and Facebook did not make it.

Titan Aerospace drone This is another setback for the Internet business space race. A few years ago, Google, Facebook, and other companies scrambled to create satellites, drones, and other flying devices that could connect, photograph, and provide other useful services from the air. According to a recent report by The Wall Street Journal, Google’s satellite company Skybox Imaging, which spent US$500 million in 2014, has already placed on the auction platform. Google changed its name to Terra Bella after acquiring Skybox Imaging. Facebook has tried to paint a good picture of the Internet drones and satellites, but the results are currently rampant. It is worth mentioning that the first test of Facebook's Aquila drone was a "folding wing", and this result does not seem the same as the company's wonderful story to the technology media The Verge. Facebook's Internet satellite AMOS-6 was destroyed in September last year due to the explosion of the SpaceX rocket. Facebook did not complain about the explosion, but due to its seriousness, it still caused a heavy blow to the company’s plan. Facebook founder Mark? Mark Zuckerberg still said that he will work on the development of space internet. In all fairness, it is not a simple project that Facebook and Alphabet have conquered. If they can truly achieve their original goals, the reward they receive will be enormous. The competition in the space field is not an area that Internet companies are familiar with. Compared with the Internet sector, where the government has almost left its hands, regulators often set many red lines for the space sector. Due to the bad media environment, the disaster consequences of these projects are often more representative in the event of problems such as crashes, explosions and other mishaps. Of course, Google and Facebook are not bad money. However, even the big tech giants of the big industry can't always support projects that don't pay off, because providing the Internet via drones, satellites, or hot air balloons is a very expensive project, and this business model has not yet been verified. Google X stated that it will continue to pursue the goal of providing Internet services from the air through the Project Loon project. Project Loon currently produces high altitude hot air balloons. However, even though Alphabet’s beautiful hot air balloons may soon lose momentum, given that Alphabet’s companies are currently under pressure to verify the feasibility of the project.

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