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Taara, Google's quirky underdog project of the day, seeks to fire internet signals using light beams across long distances above ground, an innovation over fiber optics, radio signal, and ...
Google’s Taara Hopes to Usher in a New Era of Internet Powered by Light. The Alphabet “moonshot” project is launching a new chip to deliver high-speed internet with light instead of radio waves.
NA Everyone knows the woes of slow internet connection speeds, but the Google Taara chip could provide Internet to previously unreachable areas — and at speeds of up to 20Gbps per second. This ...
Taara came to fruition in Google X's Moonshot Factory, the same incubator that birthed Waymo. The project aimed to affordably fill the connectivity gaps in the planet's high-speed internet network.
Google's parent company, Alphabet, is spinning off one of its X Moonshot projects: Taara. The Starlink competitor uses ground-based light transmission stations to beam 20Gbps internet across ...
Taara Chip: High-speed internet without wires. Google’s Taara chip can transmit data at speeds of 10 Gbps over a one-kilometer outdoor distance, according to initial field tests.
Google's X company is working on the next generation of Taara, a silicon photonics technology designed to bring fast broadband speeds to some underdeveloped areas of the world.
Google’s latest connectivity project — Taara — is intended to bring fast, affordable connectivity to the world using a new approach to wireless optical communication (WOC) technology.
Taara is the latest project to spring from X—Alphabet’s experimental hub that produced AI lab Google Brain and Waymo’s self-driving cars—and has its origins in a concept called Loon.
Alphabet is letting its laser-based internet company Taara fly and be free, according to reporting by Financial Times.Google’s parent company is spinning off the service from X, its moonshot ...
Everyone knows the woes of slow internet connection speeds, but the Google Taara chip could provide Internet to previously unreachable areas — and at speeds of up to 20Gbps per second. This project ...