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Google to offer ultra-fast broadband in select markets
Now they seem to be getting a little more serious. The company announced that it's going to offer ultra-fast fiber broadband service on a trial basis "in a small number of trial locations across the United States." They are aiming to offer 1Gbps speeds at competitive prices to at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people and basically see what happens when more developers get access to such speeds.
Google did not disclose locations, actual pricing or the time frame of when the high-speed broadband network is expected. However, keeping in line with its views on open access and net-neutrality, the company did say they will be opening the network up to other service providers and would not discriminate between different sorts of traffic carried by it.
This latest part might also serve as its strategy against any potential anti-trust concerns that may arise, you know, after Google "owns the pipes" through which you search the web, watch videos, make voice calls and access a ton other Google-owned products and services on a regular basis.
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User Comments (8)
Post a comment|
TomSEA
on February 10, 2010 3:05 PM |
Hope they come to Seattle. I'm sick of over-paying Comcast for their crap service. |
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Guest
on February 10, 2010 3:21 PM |
Finally connection speeds worth mentioning, I hope they come to Texas, I would be willing to pay the competitive price(whatever that might be) for 1Gbps speed. |
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Guest
on February 10, 2010 5:54 PM |
Sign me up! 1Gbps is what we have all dreamed of. No more lag-time with loading anything. Could you imagine? If only... the government had followed up on its' policy they adapted but dismissed long ago... Fiber-ing the states by 2012; obviously not going to happen now. |
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tonylukac
on February 10, 2010 8:18 PM |
Guess they were fibbers with fiber. Typical out of touch politicians. |
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TorturedChaos
on February 11, 2010 12:20 PM |
as great as this sounds I live in Montana and I get the feeling that sadly I wont see anything like this for a while. |
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Guest
on February 11, 2010 12:43 PM |
This means more much private data for Google. |
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peas
on February 12, 2010 10:28 PM |
The telcos, ISPs and cable cos will cry like babies, claiming Google is unfairly competing in their market. Never mind that the telcos have gotten fat & lazy, their execs overpaid and unmotivated to offer good service and customer service. Sounds kinda like GM eh? The sad thing is their lobbyists will no doubt be able to convince some politicians that they're the unwitting victim of an evil Google plot. And we'll be stuck for another decade with laughable broadband service that lags behind most every other industrialized nation. Isn't it grand that corporations can now spend unlimited funds on political campaigns? |
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namida12
on February 14, 2010 4:20 PM |
Vegas Valley might be a good test market There are many users in the Vegas Valley awaiting a choice of providers. The high speed connections are here, but the major ISP supplier meters the the flow for upscale dollars, and the new kid on the block CenturyLink is still in a testing mode... JR |
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