http://www.pcworld.com/article/2045631/starbucks-is-partnering-with-google-to-give-its-wi-fi-a-serious-caffeine-boost.html
      
      Several years ago Google outfitted San Francisco Bay area town      Mountain View with free wifi for everyone with a Google account.       Google mounted wifi routers on light poles around the community.
      
      In determining how to introduce its wifi to the rest of America,      Google decided to present it through Starbucks to replace AT&T      service at 10x speed, except in Kansas City, Austin, and Provo where      Google Fiber provides 100x speed.
      
      I expect Google to offer its wifi service throughout the USA,      starting with areas of highest internet usage, in the next few      years, and then expand to Canada, Europe, Russia, Asia, and the rest      of the world.
      
      Remember that Google owns Motorola's Cell Phone company and works      furiously to develop the next Smart Phone that runs Linux and      connects to a terminal (HDMI monitor, bluetooth keyboard with      touchpad) to provide the equivalent of low end desktop computing      power.
      
      Recall that Google has already adapted Canonical's UBUNTU Linux to      the Google Chrome Browser, providing the ChromeOS netbook operating      system.  Asus and Samsung sell "Chromebook" models for less than      $250 to compete in the tablet market.  
      
      And of course Google owns the Android cell phone/tablet environment      that runs on UBUNTU, meaning every Android device runs UBUNTU Linux      natively.  
      
      Asus chairman Shih recently said "Nexus 7 nearly broke us," then      showed a new tablet into which the user inserts an android phone.       The phone provides computing power, and the tablet provides the      large touch screen.  Asus makes the Nexus 7 and 10 tablets for      Google.
      
      Google recently introduced the ChromeCast dongle that users plug      into the flat panel TV's HDMI connector.  It allows any device      running Google Chrome to transmit streaming video from the browser      to the TV screen.  In the future, expect all browsers to come up to      Google Chrome standard so as to operate with ChromeCast or      competitive dongles.  That means the browsers must have a full array      of video decoders to make the browser compatible with various video      formats.
      
      Network communication gear manufacturer CISCO claims 55% of future      internet traffic will consist of video content.  Google has for      several years focused on incorporating new open video codec      features, most recently compliant to its own VP8 and 9 standard      (starting in 2010 with WEBM), into the Chromium/Chrome browsers.  In      2011, it began the process of stripping the h.264 standard favored      by Apple and Microsoft from the browser in favor of the VP series of      codecs.
      
      A codec compresses video in order to create smaller files, and      decompresses it for display on a computer or TV screen.  The      compression necessarily sacrifices certain details, such as in broad      areas of the same or similar colors.  When decompressing the stream,      VP9 renders a nearly flawless (to the human eye) image, while h.264      makes the image broad same-color areas look splotchy or blocky,      distracting to the viewer.  Thus Google's VP9 technology offers      superior movie-watching experience on computer and TV screens.  And      because it belongs to an Open Standards category of licensing, other      developers can create perfectly compatible technology for their      computing devices.  
      
      Many television sets already decode video compressed into popular      codec formats.  In the future, all new sets will decode VP9.  That      means the user can connect a USB flash drive or hard drive or tablet      or phone to the TV and the TV can access and play its video files.       But for those TV sets that cannot, Android and Chrome will do it for      them, and use the TV or flat panel monitor to display it through an      HDMI or ChromeCast interface.  I believe Microsoft and Apple will      add VP9 codecs to their technology mixes in order to seem compatible      with Google standards. 
      
      Google has definitely become a major mover and shaker in the      computing universe.
      
      
      
          
 
 
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