Google takes WiFi lobbying up a notch
Washington (DC) - Google this week began a new push in Washington, lobbying for more airwaves and bandwidth access for wireless Internet. It’s part of the online giant’s push to create a new standard of wireless Web access.
Google says it wants to create a platform called WiFi 2.0, a wireless high-speed Internet network that would be loosely regulated and be more cost-effective than the current offerings.
It said the new network would have "data rates in the gigabits per second." Google head counsel in DC Rick Whit said that the service could be accessible in new devices by next year, if lawmakers are willing to allow it.
The move comes after the country’s huge auction over 700 megahertz communications. The FCC required that part of this spectrum be able to run an open network for wireless devices, which is key to some of Google’s future plans.
However, Google also hoped the auction would bring in more broadband competition, but with Verizon and AT&T as the big winners in the spectrum bidding, that didn’t really happen. So Google is now trying to get through Congress directly.
At issue is a bundle of unused spectrum currently grouped in with the country’s TV signals. This so-called "white space" spectrum could be used to create a high-speed online network, contends Google.
- Networking,
- Google ,
- WiFi
- Slap down the cash and grab a phone in Thailand
- Graphene could replace silicon one day, scientists say
- Original Ada Lovelace painting purchased on eBay
- Slysoft hacks Blu-ray's latest copy protection
- Microsoft warns of critical word bug
- Sony's crapware incident: The right idea gone terribly wrong
- Digital Playground: Consumers accepting Blu-ray faster than DVD
- 10 things you didnt know about. . . Jon Peddie
- HD-DVD player supply dwindles
- Internet addicts should be considered mentally ill
- Sony-BMG working towards a music flatrate
- What if ... you had to play a simulation game before you could run for office?
- Google, Yahoo, Myspace join forces for non-profit
- Zotac jumps the gun on new Nvidia Hybrid SLI chipset for AMD
- Microsoft may raise Yahoo! bid to $34 per shar -analyst
- Motorola to split into two separate companies
- Time ticks on for lottery winner
- Ofcome gives mobile phones in aircrafts the OK




