Dear Google, the Things We'd Do with a 1Gb Pipe! Love, Jersey City.
BY Nancy Scola | Thursday, March 18 2010
Credit: Google.comEver since Google announced its intention in February to grace at least one American community with an experimental fiber-to-the-home broadband network, cities and towns have been climbing over one another to get Google's attention. The network will run at a blazingly fast one gigabit per second, so it's understandable that the idea is appealing to many places; add to that the fact that Google has pledged to offer the service at a accessible price. (How fast is one-gigabit-per-second? Fast! Really, really fast! So fast that it's about 100 times the speed of the connection in the PdF home office in Manhattan this morning.)
Some places, like the city of Concord, Massachusetts have gone about winning Google's favor by forming a Google discussion group to rally within. Others have gone the gimmick route; meet Google, Kansas -- formerly known as Topeka.
Then there's Jersey City, in the great state of New Jersey. That city of 240,000 is attempting to convince Google that they'd know what to do with such a broadband bounty of a pipe that is, metaphorically, about a mile wide. A group of interested citizens have joined up to launch the High Speed Jersey City online organizing drive, complete with website, Facebook group, and Twitter components, all aimed at collecting Jersey Cityites' (Cityeans'?) input on just how they'd use a super-highspeed network. Google's "Fiber for Communities" project is, officially, to be won through a formal Request for Information process. But it probably can't hurt for the people of Jersey City to, collectively, demonstrate that they can handle a 1Gbps pipe.