For 60 percent of the world's population, regular internet access is
about as common as flying cars. Nearly 5 billion people today lack basic
internet access either because they live in remote, rural areas or due
to restrictive censorship on the part of the local government.
But where the internet has failed, the Outernet hopes to succeed. It's working
to get a new breed of satellite-based communication off the ground,
promising to give even the most remote corners of the globe access to
the whole of humanity's collective knowledge.
The Outernet is the brainchild of the same-named New York-based tech company, a free content distribution system that would provide basic web access broadcast via a series of geostationary and LEO satellites, as well as cube sats using a combination of datacasting and User Datagram Protocols.
Datacasting
is exactly what it sounds like: the wide area broadcast of data using
radio waves rather than physical mediums (like cable, telephone, or
powerlines). User Datagram Protocols, or UDP, is
very similar to conventional over-the-air radio or television
broadcasts in that it's uni-directional. The data is beamed from its
source to any device within range and there's no guarantee that it will
be received, just like radio stations broadcast their signals without
regard to which or how many radios are currently in range to catch it.
UDP is one of the most basic forms of Internet protocol. Invented
back in 1980, it's a connectionless transmission model—in that it
doesn't require someone to be on the other end of the line when the data
is sent.
Radio for the digital age
In essence, the Outernet is a modern analog to conventional radio
broadcasts. The signal originates from a single, central
location—originally a radio station's broadcast tower, but, in this
case, the Outernet HQ in NYC—and travels across a variety of wavelengths
until it hits a suitable receiver—previously a pair of rabbit ears, now
a 20-inch satellite dish—where the end user can flip between "stations"
by modulating the received frequency.
But rather than rely on terrestrial radio stations, the Outernet
bounces its signal up to a series of satellites then back down to a
suitable receiver. This receiver doubles as a Wi-Fi hotspot then
connects to a computer or mobile device and transfers the received data
as a digital file. And since there is no two-way communication—just like
you can't talk to your radio and expect a reply—the system requires
much lower bandwidth and, therefore, much less money to operate.
"When you talk about the internet, you talk about two main
functions: communication and information access," The company's
co-founder, Syed Karim, told the BBC. "It's the communication part that makes it so expensive."
Humanity's public library
On the
information side, the company has begun forming what it calls a "core
archive" of knowledge based on information gleaned from 5,000 Wikipedia
entries, Project Gutenberg, and a smattering of copyright-free e-books.
The early plan—which definitely has some kinks to work out—is to crowdsource what content is broadcast and make decisions based on user requests and upvotes.
What's more, since the system in uni-directional, it's far more difficult to censor—just as shortwave radios served as vital information lifelines for those stuck behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War. Initially funded by a news media investment company,
Outernet's mission is to provide free, anonymous, educational
information, available to regions facing government censorship or
otherwise off the grid.
In
August this year, the startup started beaming this data across 200MB of
leased geostationary satellite bandwidth, which reaches throughout North
America and most of Western Europe, with plans to expand to the rest of
the globe by July, 2015. Should the company's IndieGoGo fundraising efforts work out, it could boost the daily broadcast limit to 100GB in the near future.
A single receiver in a central African village, according to Karim's recent Ted Talk,
could provide reams of valuable information to as many as 300 local
residents—everything from agricultural texts to health, and human
services. "If you were in the vicinity of a hotspot receiving the
data from the satellite, you would be able to connect with Outernet on
your phone and see Librarian—our index software—as if it was just an
offline website," he said. "There you would find the data, stored in files."
In addition to disseminating evergreen information, the Outernet
could very well also be used for emergency alert broadcasts which would
be updated multiple times an hour instead of the average rate of once
every week or so.
The plan is n0t quite perfect, however, as Mark Newman from the technology research firm Ovum, pointed out to the BBC:
When you start to think about the needs of rural communities in developing markets, what they are going to be most interested in are things that impact their daily lives - subsistence, crops, weather and healthcare. I question whether by sourcing content centrally and distributing it locally, you will meet those local needs - both in terms of content and language. Literacy is also going to be an issue. Delivery by audio rather than text would be something to look at, but that would use up more data.
An ambitious project
Still, some internet is way better than no internet. And with estimates
placing global internet reach on par with what Outernet can provide
still 15 to 20 years away, the Outernet could provide a valuable
stop-gap service until conventional 'net access becomes viable.
To that end, Outernet has partnered with the
World Bank in South Sudan to perform a test run of the service next
July. Should it prove successful, the company hopes to increase its
coverage area and begin offering the self-contained receivers, called "lanterns," from its Indiegogo campaign around that time.

And even if the Outernet itself fails to take off, it is far from
the only free access system currently in development. Two of the
biggest names in tech have already thrown their weight behind similar
strategies. Google's Project Loon
would see fleets of high altitude balloons bouncing 3G signals from the stratosphere back down to the Earth's most remote regions. Facebook's Internet.org, on the other hand, envisions swarms of drones and LEO satellites performing the same function. Even Space X is rumored to be building a satellite fleet to bring internet to the far-flung corners of the globe.
So, regardless of who actually comes up with the winning design,
the internet is bound to become a truly global phenomenon—including the
third world. [LA Times - Indigogo - Wiki - BBC]
Courtesy: http://gizmodo.com
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