Google Tests 1Gbps Broadband Network at Stanford University – Enterprise Networking from eWeek

Google will launch a 1 Gbps broadband network for faculty homes on Stanford University’s campus in 2011. Think of it as a flight test for its planned community deployment.

Google struck a deal with Stanford University to build a broadband network fueling Internet speeds of up to 1 gigabit per second for 850 homes owned by faculty and staff on the campus.

The experiment, slated to start in early 2011, is the latest in Google’s effort to test how ultra high-speed broadband access might work in homes.

The search engine, which depends on fast broadband connections to ensure its applications serve consumers effectively, said in February it planned to test such networks in American communities serving 50,000 to 500,000 people.

via Google Tests 1Gbps Broadband Network at Stanford University – Enterprise Networking from eWeek.

F.C.C. Opens More Airwaves to High-Speed Broadband – NYTimes.com

The Federal Communications Commission approved a proposal on Thursday that would open vast amounts of unused broadcast television airwaves for high-speed wireless broadband networks and other unlicensed applications.

The change in available airwaves, which were freed up by the conversion of television signals from analog to digital, constitutes the first significant block of spectrum made available for unlicensed use by the F.C.C. in 20 years.

It was a victory that did not come easily, or quickly, however. The F.C.C. first approved a similar measure in 2008, but the technical requirements for unlicensed devices drew objections from 17 companies or groups on both sides of the issue, forcing the commission to redraft its proposal.

While computer and Internet companies like Google, Microsoft and Dell favored the idea, television broadcasters worried about possible interference problems.

The new order eliminates a requirement that devices scan the airwaves for available signals. Rather, they can rely on a database of digital signals, updated daily, for use in locating an available channel on which to transmit.

via F.C.C. Opens More Airwaves to High-Speed Broadband – NYTimes.com.

Europe Sets Five-Year Internet Strategy – BusinessWeek

European flag outside the Commission
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Half of Europeans subscribing to ultra-high-speed broadband by 2020, bringing an end to the phenomenon of ‘digital virgins’ and the creation of a European cyber-attack rapid response system – these are just some of the ambitious goals contained in the EU’s five-year plan for the online world, unveiled on Wednesday (19 May).

Anxious that the US, Japan and South Korea – still in parts classified as a developing country – are stealing a march on the old continent, where almost a third of people have still never accessed the worldwide web, the European Commission says it is time for a digital revolution.

While today, just one percent of Europeans are signed up to fast fibre-based internet, 12 percent of Japanese have such connections and 15 percent of South Koreans.

“Can you imagine that there are still some 30 percent of Europeans who have never used the internet? Digital virgins, so to say,” Dutch commissioner Neelie Kroes said in announcing the wide-ranging plans. “We want to ensure they all have the opportunity to discover the wonders of the digital world.”

By 2013, Brussels wants all Europeans to have basic broadband and by 2020, for everyone to have access high-speed broadband above 30Mbps, with 50 percent of Europeans able to subscribe to ultra-high-speed rates of above 100Mbps.

via Europe Sets Five-Year Internet Strategy – BusinessWeek.

Sprint 4G: The Home Broadband Alternative? – PCWorld

Sprint Nextel
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In addition to being a pretty cool phone with all the latest bells and whistles, the HTC Evo 4G has one very unique attribute: It’s the first U.S. handset designed for 4G (fourth generation) mobile broadband networks.

Sprint says its 4G WiMax network, a partnership between the wireless carrier and its broadband partner Clearwire, is up to 10 times faster than today’s 3G speeds. That translates into download speeds of up to 6 megabits per second (Mbps), although performance will vary by location.

PC World‘s Mark Sullivan, who tested the Sprint/Clearwire network in Las Vegas in March, saw download rates ranging from a blistering 11 Mbps to 13 Mbps at the high end, to a not-too-shabby 2 Mbps at the low end. At those speeds, WiMax is a viable alternative to today’s home broadband offerings, including DSL, cable, and fiber (e.g., FiOS).

Sprint sees a potential market there too. “We see Sprint 4G as a tremendous opportunity for customers who are interested in choosing a wireless solution over Cable/DSL/fiber,” company spokesman Mark Elliott told me recently. The company’s 4G service is currently available in 32 U.S. markets, and Sprint hopes to reach 120 million people by end of 2010.

via Sprint 4G: The Home Broadband Alternative? – PCWorld.

FCC Offers Free Broadband Speed Test – PCWorld

The Federal Communications Commission recently launched a free broadband speed test you can use to check the speed of your Internet connection. The test will reveal how fast your connection lets you upload and download data, as well as other provide information about high-speed Internet service. You can then compare your FCC test results with the speeds promised by your Internet service provider ISP.You can find the test on the homepage of broadband.gov, but before you use it there are a few things you should know about the broadband test. This isnt just a free public service; the FCC will store your test data and could use some of your information to form its national broadband strategy.

via FCC Offers Free Broadband Speed Test – PCWorld.

Google Plans To Deliver 1Gb/sec Fiber-Optic Broadband Network To More Than 50,000 Homes

Google is getting into the broadband business. The company plans to deploy its own “experimental” fiber-optic network to at least 50,000 homes, perhaps as many as 500,000. The fiber-optic network will deliver speeds of 1 gigabit-per-second, which is more than 20 times faster than residential fiber optic services offered today in the U.S.

via Google Plans To Deliver 1Gb/sec Fiber-Optic Broadband Network To More Than 50,000 Homes.

U.S. can learn from EU telecom reforms

This winter, the global telecommunications sector is active as never before. On November 24, Europe voted on its new Telecoms Package, a set of Directives that will serve as Europe’s future network policy. The U.S. is revising its own broadband policy at the same time, commissioning Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society to compile a study on the current global broadband trends. This fortunate conjuncture of regulatory overhauls both provides a clear vista of where we are heading to in terms of telecommunications, and highlights important differences between the U.S. and Europe, offering lessons, examples and alternatives to both sides of the Atlantic.

The EU’s approach is clearly consumer driven, and reasonably so. European countries strove hard to instill competition in the telecommunications sector over the past 20 years, and, having succeeded, they can now shift their attention to enhancing the consumer experience. This did not stop the EU from taking further action to increase competition, facilitating functional separation of national telecoms, requiring more independent national authorities, overseeing national regulatory remedies proposed by national regulators and reallocating spectrum. To achieve uniform application of these rules, the EU will establish a new oversight authority, the Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications (BEREC).

But the new directives will also gravely change the lives of millions of network users directly. The EU will officially embrace a form of network neutrality: national telecom authorities will set a minimum quality level for all services, while network management allows more demanding types of applications to take up the necessary bandwidth. Customers will also receive  transparency in the form of better information on what services they subscribe to and what they can or cannot do with those communications services. A requirement that obliges all website operators to ask permission before installing almost any kind of cookie on the user’s computer is another step towards consumer protection, but this privacy provision is so strict that has attracted negative criticism. Finally, European consumers will also be able to change their fixed or mobile phone operator in one working day while keeping their old phone number (it currently takes, on average, nine).

[continued]  The Harvard Law Record – U.S. can learn from EU telecom reforms.