A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, June 2, 2019
To restore Internet access after a massive earthquake, the Peruvian government turned to balloons
One of the biggest challenges in the wake of any disaster is restoring communication networks.
When Hurricane Harvey flooded Houston in 2017, the Cajun Navy relied onapps like Zello to coordinate large-scale rescue efforts. Others have relied on Twitter and mobile charging stations to maintain communication when power disappears or first responders are overwhelmed.
On Sunday, when a magnitude 8.0 earthquake struck remote parts of Peru’s
Amazon region, Loon — an Internet-providing balloon service owned by
Alphabet, Google’s parent company — dispatched a group of balloons to
the impacted area, the company’s CEO, Alastair Westgarth said in a statement this week.
By Tuesday morning, the company said, the balloons were providing
people on the ground with wireless broadband communication. To get the
service up and running, Loon partnered with the multinational
telecommunications and mobile network provider company Telefónica.
In his statement, Westgarth said that this isn’t the first time the
company has intervened after a disaster. In 2017, he noted, Loon
responded to flooding in northern Peru and later that year provided
service to Puerto Ricans devastated by Hurricane Maria.
“What is different this time is the speed with which we were able to
respond," Westgarth wrote. "In Puerto Rico, it took about four weeks for
our balloons to begin providing service. In this instance, we were able
to begin providing service in about 48 hours, because we had already
deployed the building blocks of the Loon network.”
Reached by email, a company spokesperson said Loon was not compensated
by the Peruvian government or by Telefónica, but acknowledged that the
company is working with Telefónica “toward a commercial arrangement that
would bring Loon to Peru on a sustained, non-emergency basis."
More than half the world’s population — about 3.9 billion people — were using the Internet by the end of 2018, according to an annual report released by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).
That report found that in developed countries, four out of five people
are online, but in developing countries, only 45 percent of individuals
use the Internet, leaving “ample room for growth.”
Started in 2013, Loon’s goal is to create high-altitude, solar-powered
balloons that provide WiFi connectivity to remote locations in
developing markets. The effort is an ambitious one. The company’s
balloons take the most essential components of a cell tower — redesigned
for lightness and durability — and hoists them more than 12 miles above
the earth’s surface to the edge of space.
Putting that height and the challenges that accompany it in perspective, in 2014 The Washington Post’s Dominic Basulto wrote:
Most commercial airplanes fly at 30,000 feet (approximately 10 kilometers) above the earth’s surface, but these new balloons will fly in the stratosphere, at 20 kilometers above the earth’s surface. If you want to really understand how high up the stratosphere is, rewatch the amazing space jump of Felix Baumgartner, who jumped more than 128,000 feet from the edge of outer space in 2012.The Washington Post
Before balloons can provide customers below with service, “ground
infrastructure” must be installed and overflight approval secured. When
Loon is already active in a country, Westgarth wrote, their response to a
natural disaster is measured in days instead of weeks.
[Carpal tunnel, back pain and social anxiety: Inside the injury-plagued world of professional gaming.]
“Of course the promise of Loon is to provide service to the billions of
people who need it every day, not just when a disaster hits,” Westgarth
added. "That’s why we’re working to launch commercial service later this
year, including in Africa, that will bring mobile internet access to unserved and underserved communities. "
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