Google X, a secretive division of the company that’s working on futuristic “moonshot” projects, unveiled a bizarre effort in June called “Project Loon:” an effort to beam internet access to remote regions of the globe from balloons that drift all over the planet. Unfortunately, balloons don’t have a good track record for staying in the air very long, which presents some non-traditional problems for the internet-age company. But as Wired’s Stephen Levy writes in a new feature on Project Loon, Google thinks its big data chops can help it solve centuries-old problems of flight. “Once we see how much better, cheaper, and safer we can make things by adding intelligence, all the things we think of now as solved will be thought of as being very much version 1.0,” Google’s Astro Teller tells Wired. “This is going to play out over and over again in our lifetimes.”
Why Google thinks it can solve a big balloon problem with big data


Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.
Most Popular
Most Popular
- Microsoft’s Xbox 25th anniversary console comes in translucent green
- Dell’s new XPS 14 is better in almost every way
- The Virtual OS Museum lets you relive over 600 operating systems right on your desktop
- Xbox Games Showcase 2026: All the news and trailers
- The 7 biggest storylines from Summer Game Fest 2026











