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News: Google Unveils (Free*) Internet Service
Member Since: 8/20/2011
Posts: 8,848
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Google Unveils (Free*) Internet Service
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The service is intended as a showcase for what's technically possible and as a testbed for the development of new ways to use the Internet. Bypassing the local cable and phone companies, Google has spent months and an unknown amount of money pulling its own optical fiber through the two-state Kansas City region.
After vetting many contenders, Google announced last year that the Kansas City metro area would be the first to get its "Fiber for Communities" broadband service.
Some cities had used gimmicks to get the company's attention. Topeka informally renamed itself "Google, Kansas." A group in Baltimore launched a website that used Google's mapping service to plot the location of more than 1,000 residents and give their reasons for wanting the service. Hundreds of groups on Facebook implored Google to come to their cities.
The $70 monthly fee will pay for "gigabit" Internet service, about 100 times faster than a basic cable modem. For another $50 per month, Google will provide cable-TV-like service over the fiber, too, and a tablet computer that works as a remote.
The channel line-up includes Nickelodeon, Discovery, Bravo, Starz and Showtime (which may require additional fees) but is missing AMC, HBO, CNN, Fox News ( ) and ESPN.
Google said it will only start hooking up households in neighborhoods where a sufficient number of people want service. Kansas City residents have six weeks to pre-register for service, after which Google will decide which areas have enough interest.
Google will also offer a slower Internet option, at a DSL-like 5 megabits per second, with *no monthly fee to households that pay a $300 installation fee. The free service is guaranteed for at least seven years, but is available only in neighborhoods where enough people have pre-registered.
The $70 fee is more than what cable or phone companies charge for basic Internet service, but the service is also much faster. "Gigabit" speeds, or 1,000 megabits per second, are generally unavailable from other companies. One exception is the city-owned electric utility in Chattanooga, Tenn., which has pulled its own fiber and sells gigabit service for $350 per month.
Google is hoping that the network could help the development of other advanced applications that can take advantage of the high speeds. It's also hoping to spur phone and cable companies into upgrading their own networks.
"Access speeds have simply not kept pace with the phenomenal increases in computing power and storage capacity that's spurred innovation over the last decade," Milo Medin, Google's vice president of Access Services, said in a blog post.
However, it's expensive to pull optical fiber compared with using existing phone and cable lines to provide Internet service. Verizon Communications Inc. is the only major U.S. telecommunications company to have connected homes directly to fiber. Wall Street analysts say that project, which has cost $23 billion, is not paying off.
Verizon has stopped adding new communities to its network, dubbed FiOS. It charges $70 per month for download speeds of 15 megabits per second, less than 2 percent the speed of Google's gigabit.
"Kansas City has been competitive for video and broadband services for a long time," Venech said. "We offer advanced products and services today and we have experienced local employees delivering local services."
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If you calculate the one-time pay of $300 over the course of seven years, the service is $3.5 a month.
Hopefully this takes off. 
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Member Since: 3/12/2012
Posts: 11,474
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YES. 
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Member Since: 8/20/2011
Posts: 8,848
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And a picture to simplify things.

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Member Since: 5/4/2012
Posts: 12,811
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Member Since: 3/16/2012
Posts: 13,657
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The "gigabit" offer sounds tempting.
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Member Since: 3/22/2011
Posts: 26,525
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Meh. A little underwhelmed. 
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ATRL Senior Member
Member Since: 6/15/2007
Posts: 29,795
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I better get this im considered in the metro area
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Member Since: 9/3/2011
Posts: 22,014
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So... if they're saying this has gigabit speeds, then it gets about 128mbps? We pay $60/month for 60mbps from Charter, so this sounds like an even better deal 
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Member Since: 8/20/2011
Posts: 8,848
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Quote:
Originally posted by Big Smoke
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If it becomes a success there it will spread like butter down Paula Deen's esophagus. 
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Banned
Member Since: 1/19/2012
Posts: 1,153
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I STAN for google. Google is so amazing. 
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Member Since: 6/5/2009
Posts: 13,743
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So, for the free service. How fast is it? Because I have high speed internet and I wonder if this will be a downgrade? I'm not too up to speed on internet plans.
I have the option of signing a 12 month deal for $25 a month for internet? or a one time $300 fee. How long would I have to keep the internet though? This sounds... too good to be true, or I'm missing something.
I mean Dish offered cheap TV one year and significantly hiked the prices the next year. Not here for that ****.
Sounds promising though. I'll be following how this works and is received over the next few months.
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Member Since: 9/3/2011
Posts: 22,014
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We shouldn't even be getting excited about this, it's currently only being offered in Kansas City  it will take years for it to come into even the biggest cities.
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Member Since: 1/3/2011
Posts: 30,381
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Sounds like their wanting to create an oligopoly in the marketplace to make them them eventually a monopoly. What could happen then is google's prices may seem great for the consumer now, in the future, google could be the ones who would be charging the highest rates, causing the consumers to stick with google at whatever prices google wants it to be
So Be Warned 
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Member Since: 8/20/2011
Posts: 8,848
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Quote:
Originally posted by thegmangrant
So, for the free service. How fast is it? Because I have high speed internet and I wonder if this will be a downgrade? I'm not too up to speed on internet plans.
I have the option of signing a 12 month deal for $25 a month for internet? or a one time $300 fee. How long would I have to keep the internet though? This sounds... too good to be true, or I'm missing something.
I mean Dish offered cheap TV one year and significantly hiked the prices the next year. Not here for that ****.
Sounds promising though. I'll be following how this works and is received over the next few months.
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It's 5 megabits per second, which is faster than the ****** AT&T 3 megabits I currently have.
The 12 month $25 and $300 one-time are just two alternative methods of paying for it, one or the other will do.
The article says at least seven years, but even that much guaranteed is just 
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Member Since: 2/18/2012
Posts: 25,853
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I'd get it, if it was available in the UK. 
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ATRL Senior Member
Member Since: 6/15/2007
Posts: 29,795
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****... I read free and got excited that i didn't read the fine print
Being broke as hell sucks... Id love to try it out with my fellow Kansas citians
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Member Since: 11/4/2010
Posts: 34,287
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won't be available here in the uk for many years, we don't even have 4G wi-fi here yet 
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Member Since: 9/16/2011
Posts: 11,808
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Google is trying to be a monoply in the market.............. have they`re prices super cheap, and once the competition is eliminated they will rise there prices.......

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Member Since: 6/3/2011
Posts: 14,194
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Quote:
Originally posted by callum
won't be available here in the uk for many years, we don't even have 4G wi-fi here yet 
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Europe sucks in the technology department. 
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Member Since: 10/14/2011
Posts: 15,451
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Quote:
Originally posted by callum
won't be available here in the uk for many years, we don't even have 4G wi-fi here yet 
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Sucks, doesn't it.
I hate 3G.
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