Ok, if we're going to talk about 'vibes' then lets talk about this one, "Why is someone who is a search engine marketer deconstructing on Google's infrastructure build?" and why is that same article posted to a tech news site by a user with the name of an entrenched infrastructure player? Ok, so it smells like astroturf, but let's set that aside for a moment.<p>Remember reading all those articles about how SpaceX was 'cheating' or risking safety because their costs were so much less than what 'people who knew how to build rockets' charged? Its a simple rhetoric technique, compare X to Y when X and Y aren't correlated or even have a casual relationship.<p>Anyway, rather than devolve into some sort of ad-hominem rebuttal, lay out what the costs are for putting fiber into an area. There are easement costs (ok the City covered that), there are facilities (cooling and power for a bunch of switches and routers), IP transit costs and general IP costs (like routable addresses or not). Then there are the sunk costs of installing this stuff.<p>So one source [1] puts getting fiber to the home at less than $1,000. How many homes are there in KS? The census puts it at about 463,200 [2]. So lets say the average house hold is 2.0 people so that represents 231,700 homes? or $231,700,000 to install fiber to all of them? A lot lower than the estimates put out by the OP.<p>What is the long term value of customers there? Well we can pretty much assume nobody would be stupid enough to pick Comcast or a bell company for Internet service (10x the cost for 1/100th the bandwidh) so lets say that Internet penetration is 60% [3] so 139 thousand homes, if they got the 'cheap' stuff at $70/month that is $9.73M / month. So how much does Google earn on that revenue? We don't know but we can work it backwards, lets say all up it cost Google 4x what it costs Verizon to lay fiber so $1B, lets further say that fiber is good for 20 years of lifetime. $9.73M$/month times 20 years of 12 months is $2.3B. That is double the investment of $1B back in 20 years. Now not a great rate of return, most would like to see it double twice in 20 years. But not an insane proposition either.<p>Personally, if ComCast is right and Google is making a huge mistake, I think they should just sit back and watch it happen right? So clearly going to fail at this, their job is done, they can just eat popcorn while the big G sinks under the waves and stops being a thorn in their side. Me though, I would not bet against Google on this one.<p>[1] <a href="http://connectedplanetonline.com/mag/telecom_riding_fttp_cost/" rel="nofollow">http://connectedplanetonline.com/mag/telecom_riding_fttp_cos...</a><p>[2] <a href="http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=kf7tgg1uo9ude_&met_y=population&idim=place:2938000&dl=en&hl=en&q=kansas+city+population" rel="nofollow">http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=kf7tgg1uo9ude_&#...</a><p>[3] <a href="http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2009/06/us-20th-in-broadband-penetration-trails-s-korea-estonia/" rel="nofollow">http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2009/06/us-20th-in-broadb...</a>