Liquid, Project Taara bridge two African cities

Business Correspondent
LIQUID Intelligent Technologies (Liquid) has partnered Project Taara to connect the cities of Brazzaville, in the Congo, and Kinshasa, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), with high-speed internet via a technology that uses beams of light.

The novel idea, code-named Project Taara, and handled by Alphabet X  in partnership with Liquid, will result in citizens of the neighbouring border cities of Brazzaville and Kinshasa now being able to get faster and cheaper broadband services.

The two cities are only 4,8 km apart — separated by the Congo River — yet connectivity is five times more expensive in Kinshasa because the fibre connection has to travel more than 400km to route around the river, the deepest and second fastest river in the world.

Baris Erkmen, director of engineering for Taara, said the initiative is part of the company’s partnership with Liquid to expand and enhance affordable, high-speed internet to communities across networks in Sub-Saharan Africa.

“While we don’t expect to see perfect reliability in all kinds of weather and conditions in future, we’re confident Taara’s links will continue to deliver similar performance and will play a key role in bringing fast, more affordable connectivity to the 17 million people living in these cities,” he said earlier this week.

In the same way traditional fibre uses light to carry data through cables in the ground, Taara’s wireless optical communication links use very narrow, invisible beams of light, to deliver fibre-like speeds.

To create a link, Taara’s terminals search for each other, detect the other’s beam of light, and lock-in like a handshake to create a high-bandwidth connection.

After installing the links to beam connectivity over the world’s deepest river, Taara’s link served nearly 700 terabytes of data in 20 days with 99,9 percent availability.

The technology, known as Free Space Optical Communications, grew out of experiments the team had previously used to beam lasers between balloons in a project discontinued by Alphabet back in February.

Erkmen noted that while the system may not be perfect, it promises to change the lives of millions of people.

“Being able to deliver high-speed internet of up to 20 gigabytes per second most of the time is a vastly better option than having millions of people miss out on the benefits of connectivity because the economics of laying hundreds of kilometres of cable in the ground simply don’t stack up,” he said.

Related Posts

Bulawayo City Council cracks whip on illegal businesses

Peter Matika, [email protected] THE Bulawayo City Council has intensified its crackdown on illegal businesses and unsafe food trading operations following the discovery of 1,5 tonnes of rotten elephant meat at…

Zimbabwe ready for ‘Super El Nino’ threat to 2026/27 season

Rutendo Nyeve,[email protected] AS global weather patterns shift towards an adverse climatic cycle, the Government has moved to calm a nervous agricultural sector, revealing that the nation is well prepared for…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

×
×