Four years ago,Ikaw Lang Ang Mahal Facebook shared with the world its ambitious dream of building massive drones. Today, that dream is dead.
In a Tuesday blog post, the company announced the end of its Aquila program, an effort to construct a "high altitude platform station system" (read: massive drones) that sought to bring high-speed internet access — and, of course, access to Facebook — to an estimated 4 billion people across the globe who do not have it.
"As we've worked on these efforts, it's been exciting to see leading companies in the aerospace industry start investing in this technology too — including the design and construction of new high-altitude aircraft," Yael Maguire, an engineering director at the company, said in the Facebook post. "Given these developments, we've decided not to design or build our own aircraft any longer, and to close our facility in Bridgwater."
Facebook will continue to work with companies such as Airbus on software and hardware to help aircraft beam internet down to the masses.
The solar-powered Aquila had the wingspan of a Boeing 737. It was meant to fly at high altitudes and beam signals down to small dishes and towers, which would convert them into Wi-Fi and LTE signals for people in remote areas.
It completed two test flights, including one in 2016 that was investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board over a "structural failure" that left the drone "substantially damaged."
Topics Facebook
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT Strands hints, answers for April 23
Someone has dyed their dog to look like Pikachu and we all need to stop
War veteran slams Trump with powerful message about her own Purple Heart
US announces flag bearer for Rio 2016 Olympics opening ceremony
Best portable power station deal: Save $179.01 on the EcoFlow River 2 Max
Google launches Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL and, yes, there are notches
Chrissy Teigen can now filter out your mean Instagram comments
Google officially unveils its new Chromecast streaming media device
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 29, 2025
Warren Buffett and Donald Trump get into a billionaires' brawl over tax returns
Hurricane Laura's impact lingered with nightmarish mosquito swarms
Taylor Swift urges people to vote after sweeping up the American Music Awards
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。