The World Gets Flatter, My Internet Gets Broker, And Google Gets More Big Brotherer

Part of: Online Media Cultist

First the good news, then a story.

It's looking ever more likely that the near future will see the United States chasing other parts of the globe in creating large WiFi networks in metro areas where all comers can tap into high speed access to the Internet, very cheaply if not free of charge.

Google, for its part, is pushing things along by launching a "GoogleFi" network that covers Mountain View, California. The 11.5 square mile network will allow the plethora of start-ups dotting that area of Silicon Valley – from the funded to the mom's basement variety – to innovate and create and tinker and toil under the blanket of open and unwired Internet access. According to Niall Kennedy's Weblog, "Each WiFi user must have a Google Account and Google can pinpoint your location on the network based on your current access point."

Thomas Friedman contends in The World Is Flat that the movement toward free and open access to information, data, audio, video, etc. (downloading) and to publishing, communicating, collaborating, etc. (uploading) – both easily and freely from any number of remote points – provides one of the bases of a "flattening" effect. The flatter the world becomes, so the theory goes, the more people get to stomp onto the playing field, compelling everyone to strive toward ever higher standards of innovation.

The potential payoff of free, easy, and plentiful access to WiFi networks could be nothing less than stunning. There's the obvious: sipping a latte under a palm tree at your city park while checking your e-mail, IM-ing your pals in Rio, all while watching K-Fed and Britney on YouTube. There's the sort of obvious: a Blackberry and a laptop with WiFi access (and sometimes one out of the two) is on the verge of literally replacing the traditional office and transforming the way in which work tasks take place.

And then there's the avalanche of things we haven't thought of yet, such as cities learning how to leverage municipal WiFi with vehicle tracking. The more uses people and companies and government can glean from wireless networks, the more they will expand, benefiting all and compelling Friedman's flat world to create more, work more seamlessly, and collaborate better. All while sitting at the 50-yard line or getting your toenails painted mauve, if that's what does you fine.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2

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Article Author: Eric Berlin

Eric Berlin is the publisher of Online Media Cultist. He's also prone to referring to himself in the third person in author bios in an attempt to make it look like someone Less Important wrote it for him.
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Article comments

  • 1 - Mat Brewster

    Aug 16, 2006 at 10:32 pm

    Not the same, but my in-laws are still on the old dial up method (the philistines) when we visit I go through addict like withdrawls. Sometimes I try to log on, but its just so excrutiatingly slow the veins in my neck start popping.

    Sorry to hear about your own troubles.

  • 2 - Eric Berlin

    Aug 17, 2006 at 1:00 pm

    Yeah, it's really maddening when you can get online sometimes and not other times, never knowing when it will simply cut out for a few hours at a stretch. Of course, as you allude to, this is all predicated on an already existing online addiction!

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