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March 31, 2011
Google Picks Kansas City, Kan., for Gigabit-Speed FTTH Build
A little more than a year ago, friend of President Obama and Google (News Google went on to invite U.S. communities to apply for the honor of being selected for this FTTH effort, and it reportedly received more than a thousand requests. Then, yesterday, Google finally selected a winner. And the winner is: Kansas City, Kan. The company selected Kansas City, it says, because it believes it’s a place where it can “build efficiently, make an impact on the community and develop relationships with local government and community organizations.” According to a Google blog, the company has signed a development agreement with the city and plans to work closely with local organizations including Kauffman Foundation, KCNet and the University of Kansas Medical Center to develop “gigabit applications of the future.” This is clearly a move forward on the part of Google, which as a GigaOm story posted just days before the search giant made the announcement, was nearing the end of the first quarter of 2011 with no word yet on the FTTH effort. But the proof that Google is serious about this effort will come when the rubber hits the road (or the fiber hits the dirt, as it were). Indeed, there is no doubt still more than a little skepticism about Google’s true intentions to get into the business of building fiber-to-the-home networks. GigaOm reporter Stacey Higginbotham probably spoke for many people in writing in the above-mentioned piece: “I’m left wondering if instead of wiring up a municipality, Google may have used its ‘win a fiber network’ contest as a threat to bring ISPs around to its way of thinking on issues such as network neutrality and tiered broadband.” The same piece questioned the credentials of Milo Medin, who Google has tapped to lead its FTTH effort, but who has less than a stellar record relative to his past broadband pursuits. GigaOm reports that the former chairman of the California Broadband Task Force was chairman and CEO of M2Z (News - Alert) Networks, which promised to bring free broadband to the masses, and was co-founder and CTO of the precursor to Excite@home. Edited by Janice McDuffee More Dark Fiber Community Stories
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