In the arctic circle there is a communication system that allows for communication to be possible in the event of complete global darkness, total apocalypse, nuclear war, and other extreme circumstances. Where there is no energy, possibly no light, and thus wi-fi or cellular signal is not possible, or any other signal is not possible.
Because of this system being point to point, installation of it globally would allow anyone and everyone to access it from anywhere in the world- and thus would save the lives of many people who died because they didnt have cell phone access.
An example of this is, being trapped pinned under an avalanche, boulder, or a hiking trip gone wrong. A woman, once stranded herself in the desert. A U.S. soldier stepped on a land mine in the Middle East, and was unable to detach his leg or signal for help, death was inevitable. Some people do get lost at sea. As crazy as it sounds, I know a man personally who was lost at sea for three days after a boating trip gone horribly wrong, and was luckily found.
Any way, it just makes no sense that we rely on cellphone service and 5g or whatever. The same goes for planes that are ‘disappearing’
why not just attach them to the point to the point system with a device that is constantly pinging to it, allowing it to be tracked constantly even in the event of a crash.
It would allow us to map the depths of the ocean, the caves you cannot explore in areas that are too dangerous to go, like the Bermuda Triangle.
I don’t know what the use of this would be but. *shrugs*
The only place it wouldn’t be possible is in the earths core, near some thermal vents in the ocean, on the surface of/inside volcanoes. Because the technology cannot resist heat at that level.