The words "unmanned drone" often carry a negative connotation, but Facebook plans to change all that in the next three to five years by dropping the internet on developing countries around the globe.
Mashable reported Tuesday on Facebook's ambitious plans to deliver internet to the remaining 15 percent of the world's population who remain untethered from its social networking clutches.
Speaking at this year's Social Good Summit on Monday, Facebook Connectivity Lab Engineering Director (and MIT scientist) Yael Maguire offered further details on how a potential fleet of unmanned planes circling the globe at up to 90,000 feet could work.
Described as "roughly the size of a commercial aircraft, like a 747" but much lighter, the planes (Maguire doesn't like to call them as "drones") will fly above the weather using solar power to target 21 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia.
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Beyond the technical accomplishment, Maguire claims there are currently no regulatory issues for planes flying above 60,000 feet that would prevent beaming the internet to such underdeveloped parts of the world.
Once in the air, the drones would have to fly unmanned for several months at a time, which is no small feat considering the current world record for flight endurance on a solar-powered plane is only two weeks.
Maguire says first things first, and hopes to get the first such aircraft into the sky in 2015, after successful testing at an undisclosed US location; the actual wireless internet to be carried by a fleet of drones are three to five years away at best.
The question of who will actually be responsible for deploying the drones also remains unresolved, but Maguire wants to shed some of the lingering "negative connotations" about such planes first.
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