Skip to main content

Will Google Bid On UK Radio Spectrum?

Will Google Bid On UK Radio Spectrum?It’s called the digital dividend, the part of the radio spectrum that will be freed up over the next few years as the UK moves from analogue to digital signals for television and radio.  What the dividend is, really, is that amount that will be generated when government watchdog Ofcom auctions off that spectrum.   According to a story onZDNet, there’s speculation that Google might well put in a bid when the auctions happen next year and in 2009, asit’s planning to do in a similar auction in the US.   However, a Google spokesperson was revealing nothing to ZDNET.   "The federal [anti-collusion] laws that regulate theFCC [Federal Communications Commission] spectrum auction in the US prohibit us from commenting on our spectrum strategy anywhere else in the world. We are notallowed to say anything that would affect anyone else’s bid."   However, as the FCC auction takes place next month, once that’s over Google might reveal more.   In late 2008, theUK will auction off the so-called “interleaved spectrum,” up to 208 MHz, with the cleared spectrum going on the block the following year. There will be no limit on usage, with theexception of the spectrum used to wireless microphones. Ofcom has announced that the auction will be a beauty contest – it’s now down to who waves the most cash. The interleaved spectrumcould well work with the field of cognitive radio, which is deemed to have applications for wireless broadband. If Google wins the US auction, it could become a major wireless broadband player in thecountry, and the possibility has to exist that it would love to have similar dominance in the UK.  

Digital Trends Staff
Digital Trends has a simple mission: to help readers easily understand how tech affects the way they live. We are your…
Sustainable with Google 2021: Nest Renew, traffic light efficiency, and more
Photo of a woman adjusting a Nest Thermostat.

During its Sustainable with Google event on Tuesday, the company announced a range of improvements across its product portfolio that are aimed at helping users make more sustainable decisions. Updates and projects aim to lower carbon emissions by steering people toward more environmentally friendly travel choices, greener products, and more accurate information around climate change.

Besides consumer products, Google took the opportunity at the event to toot its own horn about a previous commitment to having net-zero data centers by 2030. The company says it is leveraging the "cleanest cloud in the industry" for partners like Whirlpool, Etsy, HSBC, Unilever, and Salesforce. More news on that front is expected next week at its annual cloud conference. Here's everything announced at Sustainable with Google 2021.
Nest offers carbon offsets

Read more
Google Meet vs. Zoom
high school senior part 2 college freshman zoom classroom

With working from home more popular than ever, videoconferencing services like Google Meet and Zoom are proving to be invaluable resources for small businesses, major corporations, and everyday netizens alike. Google Meet has only been on the market since 2017, but Google released a free version of Meet in late April 2020 in response to gaining 100 million daily users due to global restrictions on working at the office.

Zoom remains the king of the heap, with over 200 million daily users and a bevy of sophisticated features. Still, the free version of Google Meet offers users a web-based videoconferencing service that doesn't require downloading a desktop version to use and is accessible for anyone who has a Google account. Each service has its pros and cons, but both are excellent at connecting people face-to-face across the internet at no cost. Read on to learn more about how Google Meet compares to Zoom and to determine which is best for you.

Read more
Will Google ever lose its throne as king of search? Here are its main contenders
Person using Google on a laptop.

“Advertising income often provides an incentive to provide poor quality search results,” Google’s founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, argued in a research paper when they were still working out of their Stanford dorm rooms.

Today, Google is synonymous with the web -- but it’s also far from the sort of “competitive and transparent” search engine Brin and Page set out to develop decades ago. Google’s journey into the dictionary and becoming a trillion-dollar empire demanded a slate of fatal modifications to its original blueprint. The result is a search engine that buries organic links under an avalanche of ads, keeps tabs on its visitors’ every move and click, and manipulates results by tapping into the giant pool of data Google harvests from the rest of its services.

Read more