
APIs – the things that let you pull information from one app to another – are the backbone of the software you use on a daily basis. But there’s no API for live data from satellites.
Axelspace is trying to create just that. The Japanese company has big dreams, and I talked to founder and CEO Yuya Nakamura about his vision for building a space data API anyone can use.
In 2008, the company was founded around a different idea — giving companies the opportunity to have a private satellite orbiting the Earth. It started developing their own microsatellites and working together with partners like the Russian space agency to get them up in the air. For upwards of $35 million in development costs and an additional $2 million to launch it into space, anyone can get their own microsatellite the size of a desktop computer and weighing about 50 kilograms.

With two satellites launched for a Japanese weather company and the University of Tokyo, Axelspace has already seen some success. For instance, the former opted to go for a custom design that’s able to monitor icebergs in the Arctic Ocean, looking at new trade routes that are opening up due to climate change and informing the maritime industry about them.
In a different application, the Sky Canvas Project is working with the company to launch the world’s first satellite used just for entertainment purposes — it’s built to release small metal spheres that emit an intense light when re-entering the atmosphere.
After having changed the way we think about satellites, AxelSpace has already made its impact in space tech — but now it’s on its way to make the valuable data they capture in space available to anyone. In the next six years, it’s building AxelGlobe — a constellation of 50 satellites equipped with imaging sensors that are able to collectively monitor every place on the world.

Anyone can tap into this mesh network — the company is going to provide paid access to an API that any developer can plug into. The data can be used for various things like counting objects on Earth, detecting changes in specific areas and tracking crop growth — the possibilities seem limitless.This might all sound like an awfully scary prospect, but Nakamura says privacy won’t be an issue. Because of a deliberate choice for lower resolution cameras than available, people can’t be identified but the data is still perfectly usable.
All 50 satellites should be orbiting the earth by 2022, but data from select places will already be available from 2018. On the question if we shouldn’t stop shooting stuff into space to keep space from becoming a trash heap, Nakamura has a simple answer. The satellites aren’t high up enough to keep orbiting earth forever — after 25 to 30 years they automatically return to the earth’s atmosphere and end up on the ground.If Nakamura succeeds in his goal to cover the entire world with satellites, the benefits could be numerous: mapping apps could have daily imagery updates, weather organizations would have more detailed, recent data, and parking lots could keep track of the number of cars on the lot.
The possibilities would only be limited by the imagination of developers.
Social Counters$type=social_counter
/fa-clock-o/ WEEK TRENDING$type=list
-
Anonymous reporting for certain posts will be available too Instagram has just revealed plans to introduced a couple of comment control...
-
info! VLC 360° Technical Preview is avilable in Windows 7 (and later) and macOS 10.10 (and later) Popular open source video play...
-
This bug was discovered by Vincent , young French developer. As you know early,when you see send 5 second video link to ios device it ...
-
Google’s Daydream View VR headset-controller combo, which the company showed off last month, is now available and it’s got a slew of apps to...
-
Smartwatches have been the next big thing since 1982. But now the Apple Watch is in the world, it's going to start a whole ...
-
Specially for ExtraTorrent fans in The UK, China, Qatar, UAE, Norway, India and other countries where ExtraTorrent website has been block...
-
Fifteen years ago today, on October 23rd, 2001, Steve Jobs stood up on stage and announced the original iPod . Since that day, the iPod h...
-
Info! iPhone users should thank China for the repair program Apple has announced a new repair program for the iPhone 6s, calling o...
-
Microsoft is preparing a new Windows 10 advertising push in Europe, with the company investing millions of Euros in this new effort as it ...
-
UPDATE: Microsoft has provided a statement to explain that these should by no means be considered ads because they are, in fact, what it...
COMMENTS