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Apple's next project may be SATELLITE

Apple's launch may going towards  satellites
That means apple going to work on satellite
Ex-Google satellite execs reportedly join new Apple hardware team which can be work on satellite project.

Apple's next big launch may be a literal one as the tech giant  has an interest towards  in internet-beaming satellites. Which can be very fast.

The tech giant recently hired two executives who led space operations and satellite engineering at Google satellite department , according to people familiar with the matter speaking with Bloomberg . The ex-Googlers are set to join a new hardware team at Apple, led by Dropcam co-founder Greg Duffy successfully.

Duffy by the way is himself a former Alphabet employee thanks to Nest buying Dropcam in 2014 which is best . Duffy left to join Apple last year after reportedly clashing with Tony Fadell . Alphabet is the parent company of Nest and Google aparting from google in last year

But back to the matter at hand topic What exactly does Apple need with top talent in the field of satellites?

Collecting aerial data to improve Apple Maps is one possible explanation for Apple's orbital ambitions, but evidence more strongly suggests the iPhone 7 maker has designs to launch or at least be involved in delivering broadband internet from space which is very big concept.

Apple-net can be come in future.

Apple has apparently discussed such a project with Boeing, potentially becoming an investor-partne in a scheme that sends more than 1,000 satellites into low-Earth orbit, Bloomberg notes..

This partnership may not pan out, but even still the two hires suggest Apple has more than a passing interest in space-bound tech. It's far from the first company to turn its attention to the skies with the likely aim of connecting people who don't already have internet access.

Other industry leaders are already working on satellites and other means of delivering internet to remote regions, including Facebook, Google and SpaceX are main companies.

Facebook has developed a drone plane and helicopter designed to beam down internet connectivity where it's unavailable and Google has its Project Loon balloons sailing around the world to connect people in hard-to-reach locales.

Facebook, Google and SpaceX are all working on internet satellites for these purposes as well.

Apple may be playing catch-up, but that's par for the course. The company is already behind in virtual and augmented reality ( though recent reports suggest not for long ) and car tech (again,it appears to be catching up here  too).

Internet satellites would be a radical to new venture for Apple, but not without precedent. And as Facebook, Google and SpaceX jostle for space real estate which is also very big concept , Apple would do well to join the fray sooner rather than later years.
About Sattelite
The bird's-eye view that satellites have allows them to see large areas of Earth at one time. This ability means satellites can collect more data, more quickly, than instruments on the ground.
Satellites also can see into space better than telescopes at Earth's surface. That's because satellites fly above the clouds, dust and molecules in the atmosphere that can block the view from ground level.
Before satellites, TV signals didn't go very far. TV signals only travel in straight lines. So they would quickly trail off into space instead of following Earth's curve. Sometimes mountains or tall buildings would block them. Phone calls to faraway places were also a problem. Setting up telephone wires over long distances or underwater is difficult and costs a lot.
With satellites, TV signals and phone calls are sent upward to a satellite. Then, almost instantly, the satellite can send them back down to different locations on Earth.
Actually, they can. NASA and other U.S. and international organizations keep track of satellites in space. Collisions are rare because when a satellite is launched, it is placed into an orbit designed to avoid other satellites. But orbits can change over time. And the chances of a crash increase as more and more satellites are launched into space.
In February 2009, two communications satellites - one American and one Russian - collided in space. This, however, is believed to be the first time two man-made satellites have collided accidentally.
Satellites looking toward Earth provide information about clouds, oceans, land and ice. They also measure gases in the atmosphere, such as ozone and carbon dioxide, and the amount of energy that Earth absorbs and emits. And satellites monitor wildfires, volcanoes and their smoke.
All this information helps scientists predict weather and climate. The information also helps public health officials track disease and famine; it helps farmers know what crops to plant; and it helps emergency workers respond to natural disasters.
Satellites that face toward space have a variety of jobs. Some watch for dangerous rays coming from the sun. Others explore asteroids and comets, the history of stars, and the origin of planets. Some satellites fly near or orbit other planets. These spacecraft may look for evidence of water on Mars or capture close-up pictures of Saturn's rings.

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