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A senior Google executive has broken Felix Baumgartner's skydiving record, just over two years after it was set. Alan Eustace, who is the firm's senior vice president of knowledge, jumped from ...
Alan Eustace during a stratospheric skydive. The 2016 documentary "14 Minutes from Earth," which just became available on Netflix, documents Eustace's record-setting 2014 jump.
ROSWELL, N.M. -- Google executive Alan Eustace broke the sound barrier and set several skydiving records over the southern New Mexico desert early Friday after taking a big leap from the edge of space ...
There’s a reason you may not recognize Alan Eustace’s name. Despite the fact that the 60-year-old retired Google executive holds the current record for the highest skydive—a milestone he ...
Google's Alan Eustace fell from an altitude of more than 135,000 feet, plummeting for some 15 minutes. The jump broke the record of 127,852 feet that Felix Baumgartner set in 2012.
A skydiving Google executive is safely back on Earth after jumping out of a giant balloon floating in the stratosphere more than 25 miles (40 km) above New Mexico, a feat that broke the sound ...
In 2014, Alan Eustace, then the senior vice president of knowledge at Google, dropped from a hot-air balloon floating 135,899 feet above Earth’s surface. During the four minute and 27 second ...
The mark was bested, by Alan Eustace in 2014 (135,890 feet), but we thought it would be fun to catch up with Baumgartner to discuss his big jump and the last five years since it happened.
WHEN FORMER Google executive Alan Eustace dove more than 135,000 feet through the air, it was the culmination of three years of work: parachute and balloon design, test falls from 57,000 and ...
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