In an effort to get the entire planet online, Google launches transmitting balloons over New Zealand
Wrinkled and skinny at first, the jellyfish-shaped balloons that Google released this week from a frozen field in New Zealand's South Island hardened into shiny pumpkins as they rose above Lake Tekapo, passing the first test of an ambitious scheme to get the planet online.
The first person to get Google Balloon internet access last week was Charles Nimmo, a farmer and entrepreneur in the small town of Leeston, New Zealand. He found the experience a little bemusing after he was one of 50 locals who signed up to test a project that was so secret no one would explain to them what was happening. Technicians came to the volunteers' homes and attached to the outside walls bright red receivers the size of basketballs and resembling giant Google map pins.
Mr Nimmo got the internet for about 15 minutes before the balloon transmitting it sailed on past. He is among the many rural folk who can't get broadband access, and bills from his satellite internet service can exceed £600 in a month.
Google's balloons fly free and out of eyesight, scavenging power from solar panels that dangle below and gather enough charge in four hours to power them for a day. Far below, ground stations with internet capabilities about 60 miles apart bounce signals up to the balloons.
Each balloon would provide internet service for an area twice the size of New York City, and terrain is not a challenge. There are plenty of catches, including a requirement that anyone using Google Balloon internet would need a receiver plugged in to their computer to get the signal. Google is not talking costs at this point, although it is striving to make them as low as possible.
Before heading to New Zealand, Google spent a few months secretly launching flights in California, prompting a handful of unusual reports in local media. "We were chasing balloons from trucks on the ground.

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