San Antonio Express-News

How the internet travels across oceans.

- By Adam Satariano

The internet consists of tiny bits of code that move around the world, traveling along wires as thin as a strand of hair strung across the ocean floor. The data zips from New York to Sydney, from Hong Kong to London, in the time it takes you to read this word. Nearly 750,000 miles of cable connect the continents to support our insatiable demand for communicat­ion and entertainm­ent. Companies have typically pooled their resources to collaborat­e on undersea cable projects, like a freeway for them all to share. But now Google is going its own way, in a first-of-its-kind project connecting the United States to Chile, home to the company’s largest data center in Latin America. “People think that data is in the cloud, but it’s not,” said Jayne Stowell, who oversees constructi­on of Google’s undersea cable projects. “It’s in the ocean.” Getting it there is an exacting and time-intensive process. A 456-foot ship named Durable will eventually deliver the cable to sea. But first, the cable is assembled inside a sprawling factory a few hundred yards away, in Newington, N.H. The factory, owned by the company SubCom, is filled with specialize­d machinery used to maintain tension in the wire and encase it in protective skin. The cables begin as a cluster of strands of tiny threads of glass fibers. Lasers propel data down the threads at nearly the speed of light, using fiber-optic technology. After reaching land and connecting with an existing network, the data needed to read an email or open a web page makes its way onto a person’s device. While most of us now largely experience the internet through Wi-Fi and phone data plans, those systems eventually link up with physical cables that swiftly carry the informatio­n across continents or across oceans. In the manufactur­ing process, the cables move through highspeed mills the size of jet engines, wrapping the wire in a copper casing that carries electricit­y across the line to keep the data moving. Depending on where the cable will be located, plastic, steel and tar are added later to help it withstand unpredicta­ble ocean environmen­ts. When finished, the cables will end up the size of a thick garden hose. A year of planning goes into charting a cable route that avoids underwater hazards, but the cables still have to withstand heavy currents, rock slides, earthquake­s and interferen­ce from fishing trawlers. Each cable is expected to last up to 25 years. A conveyor that staff members call “the Cable Highway” moves the cable directly into Durable, docked in the Piscataqua River. The ship will carry more than 4,000 miles of cable weighing about 3,500 metric tons when fully loaded. Inside the ship, workers spool the cable into cavernous tanks. One person walks the cable swiftly in a circle, as if laying out a massive garden hose, while others lie down to hold it in place to ensure it doesn’t snag or knot. Even with teams working around the clock, it takes about four weeks before the ship is loaded up with enough

cable to hit the open sea. The first trans-Atlantic cable was completed in 1858 to connect the United States and Britain. Queen Victoria commemorat­ed the occasion with a message to President James Buchanan that took 16 hours to transmit. While new wireless and satellite technologi­es have been invented in the decades since, cables remain the fastest, most efficient and least expensive way to send informatio­n across the ocean. And it is still far from cheap: Google would not disclose the cost of its project to Chile, but experts say subsea projects cost up to $350 million, depending on the length of the cable. In the modern era, telecommun­ications companies laid most of the cable, but over the past decade, U.S. tech giants started taking more control. Google has backed at least 14 cables globally. Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft have invested in others, connecting data centers in North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Africa, according to TeleGeogra­phy, a research firm. Countries view the undersea cables as critical infrastruc­ture and the projects have been flash points in geopolitic­al disputes. Last year, Australia stepped in to block Chinese technology giant Huawei from building a cable connecting Australia to the Solomon Islands, for fear it would give the Chinese government an entry point into its networks. Yann Durieux, a ship captain, said one of his most important responsibi­lities was keeping morale up among his crew during the weeks at sea. Building the infrastruc­ture of our digital world is a labor-intensive job. With 53 bedrooms and 60 bathrooms, the Durable can hold up to 80 crew members. The team splits into two 12-hour shifts. Signs warn to be quiet in the hallways because somebody is always sleeping. The ship will carry enough supplies to last at least 60 days: roughly 200 loaves of bread, 100 gallons of milk, 500 cartons of a dozen eggs, 800 pounds of beef, 1,200 pounds of chicken and 1,800 pounds of rice. There’s also 300 rolls of paper towels, 500 rolls of toilet paper, 700 bars of soap and almost 600 pounds of laundry detergent. No alcohol is allowed on board. “I still get seasick,” said Walt Oswald, a technician who has been laying cables on ships for 20 years. He sticks a small patch behind his ear to hold back the nausea. “It’s not for everybody.” Poor weather is inevitable. Swells reach up to 20 feet, occasional­ly requiring the ship captain to order the subsea cable to be cut so the ship can seek safer waters. When conditions improve, the ship returns, retrieving the cut cable that has been left attached to a floating buoy, then splicing it back together before continuing on. Work on board is slow and plodding. The ship, at sea for months at a time, moves about 6 mph, as the cables are pulled from the giant basins out through openings at the back of the ship. Closer to shore, where there’s more risk of damage, an underwater plow is used to bury the cable in the sea floor. The Durable crew doesn’t expect the work to slow down anytime soon. After the Latin America project, Google plans to build a new cable running from Virginia to France, set to be done by the summer of 2020. The company has 13 data centers open around the world, with eight more under constructi­on — all needed to power the trillions of Google searches made each year and the more than 400 hours of video uploaded to YouTube each minute. “It really is management of a very complex multidimen­sional chess board,” said Stowell of Google, who wears an undersea cable as a necklace. Demand for undersea cables will only grow as more businesses rely on cloud computing services. And technology expected around the corner, like more powerful artificial intelligen­ce and driverless cars, will all require fast data speeds as well. Areas that didn’t have internet are now getting access, with the United Nations reporting that for the first time more than half the global population is now online. “This is a huge part of the infrastruc­ture that’s making that happen,” said Debbie Brask, the vice president at SubCom, who is managing the Google project. “All of that data is going in the undersea cables.”

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 ?? Photos by Chang W. Lee / New York Times ?? A worker sits on a giant spool of fiber-optic cable to ensure it doesn’t snag or knot on board the ship Durable.
Photos by Chang W. Lee / New York Times A worker sits on a giant spool of fiber-optic cable to ensure it doesn’t snag or knot on board the ship Durable.
 ??  ?? A worker holds a glass strand that will be woven into a fiber optic cable at the SubCom factory in Newington, N.H.
A worker holds a glass strand that will be woven into a fiber optic cable at the SubCom factory in Newington, N.H.
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 ??  ?? Fiber-optic cables are color-coded at the SubCom factory.
Fiber-optic cables are color-coded at the SubCom factory.
 ??  ?? A repeater used to connect sections of fiber-optic cable moves along a conveyor as it is loaded onto the Durable.
A repeater used to connect sections of fiber-optic cable moves along a conveyor as it is loaded onto the Durable.

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