As reported by Motherboard: The hardest thing about Google X's Project Loon hasn't been
the engineering challenge of beaming high-speed internet down to the
far-flung corners of the world from 60,000 feet up in the sky,
explained Richard DeVaul, the founder of the moonshot project. It's
trying to control all those freaking balloons.
They then followed its course eastward by checking in on UFO forums online.
"We tracked the balloon by outsourcing to the internet UFO community," DeVaul said. "It drifted all the way across the country, getting to Kentucky, to the Eastern Seaboard, all the way up to Canada."
"No one outside Google X knows this."
DeVaul, sporting a pair of Google Glass onstage at the
Smithsonian's "Future Is Here" event this weekend, gave us a rare
behind-the-scenes glimpse at one of the secretive lab's most
high-profile snafus.
"I can tell you about one of the unexpected things that happened," he said. "We created mass UFO sightings across the US."
The most famous of these occurred two years ago in Pike County, Kentucky. Alien-minded amateur astronomers spotted and captured footage of an aerial object unlike anything they'd ever seen before floating high up in the sky.
"I don't understand how it could stay up there in one
place. There was no sign of propellers or any kind of proportion system.
No gas is coming out," wrote Allen Epling, who first spotted the flying
object. The airline industry reported they didn't have any planes in
that area, and police were equally stumped.
After much speculation, conspiracy theories, and subsequent sightings in Virginia and Tennessee, Google admitted
the mysterious floater was one of the balloons they were testing for
Project Loon. The UFO community wrote the claim off as a publicity
stunt, and remained skeptical.
On Saturday, DeVaul revealed
to the public for the first time the once-unidentified flying object.
It was the "Falcon 11," a 120-foot long transparent mylar balloon made
in-house at the secret Google X lab.
"This is a balloon that went rogue," DeVaul said.
The Loon team launched the massive spherical,
internet-carrying balloon from California on what was supposed to be a
short-duration test flight. But it "ran out of juice" and they lost
track of it.
"We tracked the balloon by outsourcing to the internet UFO community," DeVaul said. "It drifted all the way across the country, getting to Kentucky, to the Eastern Seaboard, all the way up to Canada."
"No one outside Google X knows this."
I caught up with DeVaul after
the event and asked him if the Falcon 11 was still in use, or if that
particular model was benched after its extraterrestrial disappearing
act.
Turns out it was one of many models. All
the balloon prototypes are named after birds, starting with "A," he told
me. So that gives you some sense of how many attempts there have been
to get the design right—and the "Falcon" is from back in 2012.
When I asked DeVaul what letter they're on now, he laughed
and said unfortunately he wasn't able to talk about that (surprise
surprise), but suffice to say they were a lot further along. He then
hinted that the lab is now working on totally something new—he wouldn't
confirm if it's even a balloon—that, if successful, could stay
aloft forever.
Typical Google X vaguery and dramatic flare. We’ll be on the hunt for more details on that
mysterious object, and in the meantime, the Project Loon team will
ostensibly keep trying to perfect its balloon design. Note to UFO
chasers everywhere: It might not be an alien spacecraft, it might just
be an internet-carrying “Toucan” balloon gone rogue.
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