Company working on balloons that provide internet access.
1Google's Project Loon sends giant balloons bearing Internet-beaming antennas into the stratosphere.
2Project Loon team members install a Loon Internet antenna while the schoolchildren look on.
3Leaving Earthbound ISPs Behind Last year, Google began testing Project Loon balloons over New Zealand.
4Known as Project Loon, it seeks to provide internet access to the hinterlands through high-altitude balloons.
5Project Loon was first launched in 2013, with the intention of providing internet access to rural areas.
6Photo: Courtesy of Google Project Loon team members install a Loon Internet antenna while schoolchildren look on.
7At Monday's event he touted Project Loon, an effort to deliver Internet service from connected air balloons.
8These tests are another step in the rapid evolution of the unexpected and surprisingly effective Project Loon.
9At issue was its effort to deliver internet access to remote areas by balloon, known as Project Loon.
10On the near horizon of African technology and ICT, however, the most invigorating ideas may be Google's Project Loon.
11He works on Project Loon, Google's ambitious plan to deliver Internet service from enormous balloons floating in the stratosphere.
12Photo: Courtesy of Google When Google announced Project Loon on June 15 last year, a lot of people were skeptical.
13Mahesh Krishnaswamy But this week, on the two year anniversary of Project Loon, Krishnaswamy and his team are somewhere else.
14Last year, Google Inc announced Project Loon, which aims to use solar-powered air balloons to beam the Internet to remote regions.
15X is home to Project Loon, an effort to beam the Internet from the stratosphere down to people here on Earth.
16Loon began life in 2011 as a Project Loon, inside Google X, the search company's arm dedicated to incubating ambitious ideas.
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