Raymond Henagen, CEO, Rock Port Telephone, had another practical perspective on faster broadband: 'who is going to pay as users keep demanding more capacity?"
Former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin noted that "speed matters," where it comes to broadband. Specifically, faster broadband leads to applications innovation. Developers always create applications that take advantage of faster broadband, and people seem to learn to rely on those apps.
That basically is why Google is building a symmetrical 1-Gbps fiber network in Kansas City, Kansas. Google wants to see what will happen once that level of broadband is available to developers and users.
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