Google Fiber To Launch In Austin, Texas In December 88
retroworks writes WSJ blog reports on Austin, the third city to get fiber-optic high speed internet networks laid down by Google (Kansas City and Provo, UT were the first and second). The service averages 1 gigabit per second, about 100X the average US household speed, and costs $70-120 per month (depending on television). Google promotes the roll-outs by holding "rallies" in small neighborhoods. The sign-up process starts in December, focusing on south and southeastern parts of Austin, a Google spokeswoman said Wednesday. It was announced that fiber was coming to Austin back in April.
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Hell, I've been planning on cabling my home, this would be the sort of thing to make me implement those plans even with the construction that I'd need to do for pathways and an MDF...
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This is nice if you happen to live in Austin, but I guarantee it won't go much farther. Maybe a couple more cities and then it will be abandoned, just like Verizon did.
Re:I can hear the hipster rejoice from here (Score:4, Informative)
While I generally agree with you I have to admit that I live in North Pflugerville (between Austin and Round Rock) about 2 miles from Dell in a new neiborhood. I have had Fiber to my house since I moved in 7 years ago. While there is no telling when if ever Google will come to my area as soon as they anounced they were coming to Austin AT&T finally got off there butt and turned on all the fiber they already had installed all over the area. True if you are in an older neiborhood it will be awhile before you get fiber but if you happen to live in a newer neiborhood (less than 7-8 years old) there is a good chance you already have fiber to the home and that means 1Gig from AT&T. So far the service has been fantastic! Yea it's AT&T and I would prefer Google but hey they are matching Googles price and speed so no complaints at this point.
I live in the Northeast part of Austin... (Score:5, Insightful)
...and I'm never getting fiber internet. Certain parts of the city are completely ignored for infrastructure upgrades. We just spent $10 million putting bicycle repair kits and air pumps in the richer parts of town, while delaying the sewer installation in my part of town (we were annexed by the city in 2007 and were supposed to have sewers hooked up in 2012...it's 2014 and now they're saying they "hope" it'll get done by 2015). We spent another $1-2 million on "sharrows", which are little arrows that go in the roads to show that we should share those lanes with bikes. We also just spent something like $30 million finishing a bicycling bridge over Town Lake.
In other words, rich people in the south and southwestern parts of town get whatever they want on the taxpayer dime while people in the north and east have to put up with roads without sidewalks, failing sewer systems, and lackluster police protection. Yay.
Re: I live in the Northeast part of Austin... (Score:2)
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Now magnify that 100x for brand-new fiber. They probably aren't using existing dark fiber since it's owned by others, unless they'
toward Round Rock and Dell employees, Parmer? (Score:2)
If you're in the part of northeast Austin where the tech companies are, I'd think Google would want to get those areas done fairly early. Technology professionals will use fast internet and spend money online. The city government may not give a shit, but I'd expect Google to start with the densest concentrations of good customers.
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183 & 620 was me l, cattle, and a stop sign (Score:2)
Would you believe when I moved to that area, there were cattle grazing at the intersection of 183 & 620, which was a stop sign as I recall. :)
Re:I live in the Northeast part of Austin... (Score:4, Informative)
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All the public infrastructure crap you're complaining about was part of bond packages that voters approved and paid for with tax money.
Google fiber ain't that. It's a subscription service being provided by a corporation. The fact that you're complaining of not having sewers hooked up indicates you live in a rural section which isn't the most lucrative region for Google to spend money where the people / mile-of-fiber ratio is thin.
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But It doesn't make the liberals feel good your way. Duh!
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I feel for you, dude. I lived in NE Austin for 12 years, but last year I moved to NW Austin. We just got sick and tired of being ignored by the city. I hope the new district plan will improve things for you. My suggestion is that you really pester your district representative as much as you can to improve things.
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Living in KC (Score:5, Informative)
Austin may be the third city to get Google Fiber, but that doesn't mean Kansas City is all up and running. I live in Kansas City and I'm still waiting for my Google Fiber connection to be hooked up. The fiber is now on the utility pole behind my house, but they haven't run the fiber to my house yet. A recent email from Google stated that it might be as late as spring 2015 before my neighborhood is hooked up.
In the mean time, I plan to improve my latency by hiring Lorenzo Cain to run my external HDs to/from whom ever I'm trading files with.
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It's possible that the central office or local exchange is still being built. It's possible that the local exchange doesn't have its own backbone to the CO finished yet. It's possible that the CO o
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Brutal. I live in city #2 (Provo, UT for those not keeping track), and, because I can't really help myself, all I can say is: this post brought to you via Google Fiber.
Originally, quite a bit of time was spent doing upgrades behind the scenes, then they switched everyone who was on the iProvo network to Google, then they started adding new customers in built-out neighborhoods. I am lucky enough to live in a neighborhood that they switched over relatively early. It looks like they've got quite a ways to g
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And it will take just as long to get it in Austin. The summary says that this was announced back in April, but it was announced (and the linked story is from) April 2013. It's been 16 months to learn that in two months neighborhoods with the same density as mine, but in another part of town, can sign up for fiber. They'll get it some time after that. It seems unlikely to be before 2017 in my neighborhood now.
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Dear Google... (Score:1)
... Canada!
Re:I thought this said Australia (Score:4, Insightful)
Blame the combination of Telstra (who don't particularly like the idea of a network it has no control over and earns no money from as would have been the case for a FTTP NBN), Foxtel (who see a high speed network killing off their overpriced crappy pay TV offering) and the big movie/TV companies (who see a high speed network as leading to increased levels of piracy)
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They were just acting on orders from their corporate masters...
Re:I thought this said Australia (Score:4, Funny)
Structured Highspeed Internet Technology, Mate.
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Looking forward to the year 2174 A.D. (Score:5, Funny)
The year they finally get around to having 10% of the country wired for fiber.
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Also the year the FCC holds its final hearing on the mythical "net neutrality" that was spoken of in the beforetime, and deciding that the Corporation (there'll only be the one by then) doth not approve, hence it shall not be, amen.
nearby, the cable co announced gigabit cheap (Score:5, Insightful)
About two hours from Austin is College Station, where the cable company has long been providing about 10mbps for $70 or so. They just announced this will be the first place their speed will go to 100Mbps for no extra charge, and gigabit will be available for a little more. I'm thinking they noticed Google fiber down the road and figured they better get their act together.
There hasn't been much real competition until Google fiber - just DSL, at the same slow speed and the same price, but several weeks to get set-up.
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This is kind of what happened with webmail when Gmail came out. I remember at the time, in 2004, Hotmail was 2MB of storage and Yahoo was 3MB of storage. As soon as Gmail came out with its 1GB of storage, you saw the others suddenly start offering a lot more storage.
I want slower for cheaper (Score:3)
Keep in mind that those are the needs of someone who develops software that is heavily network centred. Once in a blue moon when I really need a full iso of a linux distro I might grumble that faster would be better but I am not sure that I would notice the difference 99.9% of the time.
Re:I want slower for cheaper (Score:4, Informative)
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Not that GF is coming to Canada but I would celebrate my call to Eastlink to tell them that they won't be getting another cent from me in this lifetime.
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I wonder what being able to say you are wired to google fiber does to the resale value of your home? Being able to advertise google fiber access must be a huge incentive for certain home buyers and I bet you could recoup that $300 instantly just in resale value.
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A friend of mine bought a brand new build home a couple of years ago, and I cabled the house for ethernet, coax, and phone. I ran cabling to predicted demarc points for both the telephone company and the cable company. She didn't subscribe to phone service, and the phone company never installed a service connection or demarcation point. The cable company, for which she did sign up for service from, did.
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I'm in the same boat. I'm paying $60/mo for what is typically 11-12mbs. I've never found a need to have anything more than that. Sufficient to download games in 1-2 hours, stream Netflix, and do my job (typically involving VPN and a few RDP sessions). I guess going up to 100mbs or gig would be worth it if there were 5 people in the house all trying to stream video and play games at once.
I'd rather see the low end packages get cheaper than get higher speeds that I have no use for.
Commas matter. (Score:1)
As written, this headline says that Google fiber is going to launch in Austin, and that Texas is going to launch in December.
Put the comma after "Texas" too, and you'll have something that's correct.
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What you're asking for is called the "Oxford Comma," and is considered optional.
There's a really interesting TED video on the debate about the Oxford Comma, and usage, on TED [ted.com]
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No. The Oxford Comma specifically refers to a comma between the last two items in a series. "I went to the store for grapes, milk, and bread" versus "I went to the store for grapes, milk and bread".
The comma between the city name and the state is required; the additional comma after the state is usually needed for clarity when the city and state are used in a sentence.
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The city and state combo is a list. An example if we extended the list would be: Austin, Texas, United States, and Earth.
Hence, we're talking about the oxford comma.
Privacy Nightmare, no thanks!!! (Score:1)
Why would anyone want this from Google? Seriously! They will datamine every single unencrypted bit that you send and receive, for life, and sell it to the highest backdoor bidder, including the government, the credit bureaus, and walmart.
Bet you $100 they require your real name, email address, telephone number, date of birth, and social security number to sign up too.
Screw that.
flushing (Score:2)
So which connector do I need to flush to get Google fiber?
Don't get your hopes up if you're in an apt. (Score:1)
I live in KC and it's a real pita to find a place with google fiber. Google will only wire up an entire complex at once and they charge the owners a lot of money for it.
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There's quite a few complexes near where I live that have Google Fiber. It's proudly advertised on various complex's banners.
Why so slow? (Score:1)
Are they being blocked by cable companies who know they will lose to any competition?
They are also deploying weather balloons in extremely poor countries to get people anywhere on the internet.
At this rate those people will have better internet than most US citizens, and for free.
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These articles frustrate me. (Score:2)
I get so frustrated reading these kind of articles. We get 3mb for $70/month. That's 3mb with horrible latency and dropped packets. That's 3mb that frequently requires pages to be reloaded in order to complete properly.
Of course 3mb is a lot better than my first connection which was, and I kid you not, 110kb via an acoustic coupler on a good old fashion TTY. So I guess that makes my complaint a first world problem.
Oh well, never mind. Century Link just carry on with your fine upstanding service.