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5G From the Sky: New Internet Infrastructure Takes Flight

Sceye's High-Altitude Platform System just concluded its endurance testing program, bringing this new way to connect one step closer to widespread adoption.

Headshot of Jesse Orrall
Headshot of Jesse Orrall
Jesse Orrall Senior Video Producer
Jesse Orrall (he/him/his) is a Senior Video Producer for CNET. He covers future tech, sustainability and the social impact of technology. He is co-host of CNET's "What The Future" series and Executive Producer of "Experts React." Aside from making videos, he's a certified SCUBA diver with a passion for music, films, history and ecology.
Expertise Future tech, sustainability, and social impact of technology Credentials
  • Gold Telly Award, 2X Silver Telly Award
Jesse Orrall
A. large silver oblong balloon-like structure floats in to the stratosphere. It is filled with helium.

Sceye's HAPS on its way to the stratosphere.

Sceye

A new way to get internet took to the skies recently, and it aims to be a bridge between satellite-based internet like Starlink and terrestrial-based internet from local cell towers.

The large oblong silver balloons are called HAPS, short for High Altitude Platform Systems. HAPS come in many shapes and sizes, including the fixed-wing Airbus Zephyr. Sceye, however, has chosen a balloon-like design to take advantage of helium's lighter-than-air lift to reach the stratosphere and stay there.

Watch this: 5G From the Sky: New Internet Infrastructure Takes Flight

Sceye's latest test flight marked the end of the technology's endurance program, where the HAPS spent over 12 days in the air. The program gathered data about how systems degrade over time. This data will allow the company to make necessary adjustments and prepare for upcoming commercial test flights, which will focus on traveling to specific areas to provide internet to people on the ground.

Locating local internet providers

a large oblong silver balloon-like structure lifts off from a small hangar in new mexico.

Sceye's HAPS lifting off from the company's hangar in New Mexico.

Sceye

Sceye's HAPS aim to compete with satellites as a new layer of infrastructure in the stratosphere, providing not only internet but also environmental monitoring and more.

To see Sceye's HAPS in flight, check out the video in this article.

Locating local internet providers