Google Fiber Internet service may be expanding to the Los Angeles and Chicago areas in the future:
Google Fiber, Alphabet's fast Internet service, said Tuesday it is planning to come to Los Angeles and Chicago, the second and third-largest U.S. cities by population, if they pass a long review.
"While we can't guarantee that we'll be able to bring Fiber to Chicago and L.A., this is a big step for these cities and their leaders," Jill Szuchmacher, director of Google Fiber's expansion efforts, wrote in a blog. "Expansion planning for a project of this size is a huge undertaking."
There are now 20 cities where Google Fiber is providing service already, building its network or considering building, including Atlanta and Austin. The 20 metro areas contain about 5% of the total U.S. population and include six of the 10 largest U.S. cities by population. Its expansion plans have become a lot more aggressive since Google re-organized itself into the Alphabet holding company earlier this year. The goal is to give newer businesses more freedom to invest while making them more accountable for their financial performance.
The Los Angeles Times reckons that Google will be looking for concessions:
[More after the break.]
To better qualify for Google Fiber, L.A. will have to adhere to a checklist developed by the company that includes "efficient and predictable" permitting, access to city property for network hubs and the appointment of a person to deal directly with the company. The goal is to streamline the process to reduce the risk that a city may not be ready.
"In the past, municipalities would ask for significant concessions like 100% coverage or building connections to schools. It was really hard to get into a new area," said Jan Dawson, chief analyst at Jackdaw Research. "What Google has done is turn the model on its head by saying, 'If you want us to build fiber, what are you going to do for us?'"
[...] Google Fiber is currently available in three cities: Kansas City, Mo.; Provo, Utah; and Austin, Texas. The service will soon roll out in six other places: Salt Lake City [UT]; Atlanta [GA]; San Antonio {TX]; Nashville [TN]; and Charlotte [NC]; and Raleigh-Durham, NC. The company is also trying to bring Google Fiber to San Diego [CA], Irvine [CA] and Chicago [IL], which was named alongside L.A. in Tuesday's announcement.
AT&T recently brought U-Verse gigabit Internet service to Chicago.
Announcement at the Google Fiber blog.
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday December 10 2015, @12:01PM
C'mon, New York already! This city has 3rd world throughput at exorbitant prices. Not even FIOS is available in Brooklyn. It's absurd.
Washington DC delenda est.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 10 2015, @05:15PM
just curious .. any info on what kindda "off-the-shelf" tech is being deployed by google fiber?
like that piece of equipment that gathers the 100 fiber strands from 100 google-homes and then muxes
them into one fiber to be carried off ... to ... facebook and youtube.
i doubt that facebook and youtube are getting 1 new fiber strand from google to their data-center
for each new google-fiber enabled home ...
any (techy) infos on that?
(Score: 2) by Hyperturtle on Thursday December 10 2015, @08:35PM
Does this service require an actively used login to google's software services?
Comcast does not, if one is just demanding plain internet from them. There's an online account one can use, but it's not necessary aside from tying the account billing to a single ID that doesnt even need to be accessed to get things changed or done -- often you have to talk to a human to get anything accomplished.
I do not recall anyone singing the praises of a google customer call center and the support they provide; I am curious to see how people are allowed to use the service.
I know they were forbidding servers for a while, but I really do not know restrictions they have now that it has been rolled out to other metro areas and they've had a chance to learn what people do with an always on connection...
(Score: 3, Informative) by takyon on Friday December 11 2015, @01:22AM
It seems to require a Google Account for billing, which it sends to you in the form of email. That's it.
Google customer service has always been pretty bad. Or more accurately, human hands-off. I imagine it is better in the era of paying Google Fiber customers, with greatly improved chances of talking to a human on the phone.
http://imgur.com/BbVkC6H [imgur.com]
https://www.reddit.com/comments/3qposc [reddit.com]
https://www.reddit.com/r/google/comments/2askox/best_customer_service_chat_ever_google_fiber/ [reddit.com]
They changed that after pressure from EFF and others:
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 0, Troll) by Ethanol-fueled on Friday December 11 2015, @01:23AM
I was recently contacted by a recruiter looking for a GIS/Survey technician to work on a feasibility study for a major Telco on behalf of Google, to investigate the feasibility of bringing Google Fiber to San Diego. *
I kneaded my dick with excitement † and told them all about the rad qualifications I had and why I'd be perfect for the job. The recruiter's tone became noticeably depressed after I had told her all of my qualifications, as she sighed, "sixteen bucks an hour, one year contract, non-negotiable."
I explained to her that there were a few Mexicans hanging outside the local Home Depot who would be thrilled to walk around and press buttons and plant flags for that kind of money. ‡
* This is true.
† This part isn't true but the rest of the paragraph is.
‡ This part isn't true.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Friday December 11 2015, @01:30AM
San Diego was hidden there in the summary. They also have Phoenix, Tampa, Jacksonville, San Jose, Portland, Louisville, and Oklahoma City on the map [google.com].
Maybe if you expressed it in daily life, you wouldn't need online as an outlet.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]