its out of the realm of possibility. Nobody blocked FIOS, plus the other provider couldn't pay enough money to make up for the lost money of the customers. Its not at all beneficial, or legal.
Well, of course it isnt legal, never said it was.
its out of the realm of possibility. Nobody blocked FIOS, plus the other provider couldn't pay enough money to make up for the lost money of the customers. Its not at all beneficial, or legal.
How does Google make money from the $300 construction charge? I'm thinking 5MBs down is enough for most folks who don't consume lots of streaming media. I'm sure the service will be spotty too. 7 years is not promotional pricing.
Well, of course it isnt legal, never said it was.
10GB Down for $70 cannot possibly make up the difference for the free users. I think this is similar to their gmail strategy of announcing such huge capacity knowing most users won't be able to utilize most of it. I wonder if they'll try monetizing the users by forcing them to choose Google services. That would be my analysis.
Now if only they would stop with putting ridiculous high-speed service in cities and give us that live just outside of suburbia something faster than dial-up.
I live about 8 miles from the nearest town, and 4 miles from where Time Warner stops their internet service, although we get cable TV from them. Their explanation? The equipment/lines in the area are too old for internet and they will never replace them, but they are quick to offer me their digital TV packages.
but its not beneficial either. It won't happen, anyway, i'd love to hear from Google if they plan on expanding beyond muni stuff
http://fiber.google.com/plans/residential/
FREE 5mbps internet!
$70 for 1000mbps download / 1000mbps upload
NO DOWNLOAD CAPS.
I want this so bad. Google PLEASE go nationwide.
I think in the UK you can get speeds comparable to our US DSL speeds for just a few £ per month usually under £10. So FREE 5mpbs from Google isn't too surprising.
How does Google make money from the $300 construction charge? I'm thinking 5MBs down is enough for most folks who don't consume lots of streaming media. I'm sure the service will be spotty too. 7 years is not promotional pricing.
Anyone have an idea why Miami has no fiber services at all? I'd die for something like this but I can't find a single thing anywhere.
I dont see how it wouldnt be beneficial. We have people in this thread, saying they arent interested since it wont have espn.
This is all moot, since, like you said, it wont happen. Im interested to hear how they plan to select the next city(cities), if they pan to expand.
I just don't see the plan to expand is through low income users who can't afford the internet right now. I can see it tethered through their own services. In a metropolitan city, it's hard to imagine market penetration is low enough to justify such a strategy.I'm talking about people that would be using the internet at all only because the "free" option exists. Google makes money from people using the internet, and there are still a lot of people in this country who simply don't because they can't afford to. Part of this drive is an effort to get internet to people who have no internet, not just raising the standards of speed. It's a very long haul business plan, I'm sure.
companies wouldn't be willing to pay more then what Disney can get/make from Google for carrying ESPN.
That is how all ISPs are run. You over-provision your network because you know all your users aren't using all the bandwidth they pay for at all times.10GB Down for $70 cannot possibly make up the difference for the free users. I think this is similar to their gmail strategy of announcing such huge capacity knowing most users won't be able to utilize most of it. I wonder if they'll try monetizing the users by forcing them to choose Google services. That would be my analysis.
You guys do realize they are going to take several years to roll this out right? After that it will take many more years before the results of this are studied and they decide to expand it.
Your best bet is to lobby your local city govt to try to get a municipal network going.
I just don't see the plan to expand is through low income users who can't afford the internet right now. I can see it tethered through their own services. In a metropolitan city, it's hard to imagine market penetration is low enough to justify such a strategy.
I definitely welcome this new service as it serves to undermine the telecom monopoly pricing that exists in many cities. I've always heard broadband is overpriced in America, I hope that's true. I can see why Google would like to make some head way.
You get a Nexus 7 tablet with the $120 plan? Wow.
And what does "full channel TV line up" mean. Is it just Google TV? I thought the content on there was weak.
I'd say its a good 5 years away from spreading exponentially. It took them forever for a subsection of KC
The first step is always the hardest.
OH GODS YES
But wait... residential homeowners?
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
GOOGY PLEASE COME TO CANADA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
How does Google make money from the $300 construction charge? I'm thinking 5MBs down is enough for most folks who don't consume lots of streaming media. I'm sure the service will be spotty too. 7 years is not promotional pricing.
How does Google make money from the $300 construction charge? I'm thinking 5MBs down is enough for most folks who don't consume lots of streaming media. I'm sure the service will be spotty too. 7 years is not promotional pricing.
If I'm imagining it correctly, they won't have to do it again should somebody else move in and want to get Google service. So it'd be an investment for life - or for as long as the house remains.
But what happens if you move into a qualified neighborhood but that house wasn't signed up for it within the next few months? I don't understand if there is a deadline to pre-register even if your whole neighborhood is qualified.
I'd imagine people would be able to sign up anytime after the fiber rolls out in their neighborhood.
Man, once this shit takes off it will be game over for ISPs. Knowledgeable experts, how long do you think it will realistically take to get to major cities? 5 years?
Man, once this shit takes off it will be game over for ISPs. Knowledgeable experts, how long do you think it will realistically take to get to major cities? 5 years?