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Google parent 'graduates' moonshot projects Loon, Wing
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) July 11, 2018

Google parent Alphabet announced Tuesday it was raising the profile of two "moonshot" projects -- one for drone delivery and the other for global internet connectivity with balloons.

The announcement means that balloon project Loon and drone project Wing will be independent companies within Alphabet -- and in theory could be spun off entirely in the future by the California technology giant.

Wing and Loon have been part of the Alphabet "moonshot factory" known as X, creating projects with potential to disrupt new sectors.

"X's job is to create radical new technologies and build a bridge from an idea to a proven concept," said moonshots "captain" Astro Teller in a blog post.

"Now that the foundational technology for these projects is built, Loon and Wing are ready to take their products into the world"

Alphabet has previously "graduated" its Waymo self-driving car division, along with the cybersecurity unit Chronicle and the life sciences project Verily.

Another moonshot project, the geothermal energy unit called Dandelion, has been spun off as a fully independent company.

Wing is building an autonomous delivery drone service which aims to reduce fossil fuel use and urban congestion, and facilitate disaster relief transport. James Ryan Burgess was named chief executive.

Loon is building a network of balloons, traveling along the edge of space, to expand internet connectivity to underserved areas and disaster zones. Its CEO will be Alastair Westgarth.

While Alphabet has kept some of its projects under wraps, Teller said the latest moves will allow the company to concentrate on "new moonshot adventures," and ongoing projects including Google Glass, robotics and wireless optical communications.


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For how long will the USA remain the Nobel Prize leader?
Frankfurt, Germany (SPX) May 10, 2018
Since first being awarded in 1901, most Nobel Prizes for science have gone to the USA, the United Kingdom, Germany and France. An empirical study by Professor Claudius Gros from the Institute for Theoretical Physics at the Goethe University in Frankfurt has now shown that the Nobel Prize productivity in these countries is primarily determined by two factors: a long-term success rate, and periods during which each country has been able to win an especially large number of Nobel Prizes. For the stud ... read more

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