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09//26//14

Allow Municipalities the Chance to Build Broadband Networks

Allow Municipalities the Chance to Build Broadband Networks

an article by Mike Montgomery in the Huffington Post


09//09//14

AT&T and Verizon say 10 Mbps is too fast for ‘broadband’

http://arstechnica.com/business/2014/09/att-and-verizon-say-10mbps-is-too-fast-for-broadband-4mbps-is-enough/

AT&T and Verizon have asked the Federal Communications Commission not to change its definition of broadband from 4Mbps to 10Mbps, saying many Internet users get by just fine at the lower speeds.


09//03//14

Analysis cite Cable’s defensive response toward top speeds

http://www.multichannel.com/blog/i-was-saying/ggame-gigs-analysis-cites-cables-defensive-response-toward-top-speeds/383483#sthash.wKOz5tk8.dpuf

“Cable and telephone company incumbents remain reluctant to upgrade to highest speed broadband networks – especially the much-touted Gigabit-per-second infrastructure – unless they face competitive threats, notably from Google Fiber, says the third annual report from Gig. U.”


08//26//14

Google fiber is fast, but is it fair?

http://online.wsj.com/articles/google-fuels-internet-access-plus-debate-1408731700

Google has searched for ways to provide faster Internet service and, in the process, it is changing how next-generation broadband is rolled out.

Telecom and cable companies generally have been required to blanket entire cities, offering connections to every home. By contrast, Google is building high-speed services as it finds demand, laying new fiber neighborhood by neighborhood, called ‘fiberhoods’.


08//04//14

Frontier prepares to battle Google in Portland OR’s suburbs

http://www.oregonlive.com/silicon-forest/index.ssf/2014/07/frontier_communications_facing.html

Frontier Communications chief executive Maggie Wilderotter suggests that customers don’t need a gig as Google Fiber prepares to launch its services in the Portland area, perhaps as soon as next year.

Google promises “gigabit” speeds for residential users – 1,000 megabits per second, roughly 20 times a typical broadband Internet connection today. Frontier, who serves Portland’s suburbs since acquiring Verizon’s FiOS service four years ago, offers 15 mbps for $30 a month in the area. Ms. Wilderotter says that, ‘..for most people, 10 to 12 megabits per second will be perfectly adequate for at least the next couple years.’