Author: Jamie Welch, Senior Editor

American cities fight for Google's attention

One month ago, Google put the word out that it was looking to build and test its own fiber-to-the-home networks in a couple of cities. The speeds would be up to 1 Gbps and the reach would initially be about 50,000 homes. Immediately, hundreds of cities began making pitches to attract Google’s attention, some earnest, some crazy. Topeka, Kansas unofficially renamed itself “Google” for the month; Sarasota, Florida re-named its City Island “Google Island”; Duluth, Minnesota's mayor Don Ness jumped into a 35 degree Lake Superior as a dual-purpose media event for Google Fiber and the Special Olympics; and 1,000 Morgantown, West Virginia residents last week held up signs saying “We Want a Gig” at the WVU-Georgetown basketball game. The majority of the cities interested in getting Google Fiber haven't resorted to cheap publicity stunts though, and are hoping that their answers to Google’s Request for Information will be much more convincing. “I think we’re going to draw the line at silly stunts,” Madison, Wisconsin alderman Mark Clear said today. City officials there are hosting a public meeting to gather ideas for their pitch and show the community’s interest in the project. Juneau, Alaska has made the case that its isolated, mountainous location will serve as an ideal testing ground since it is both environmentally challenging and populous. Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley reminded us of Baltimore’s historical significance as...

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YouTube turns on captions on millions of videos

YouTube is adding captions to millions of Internet videos. The feature unveiled Thursday expands upon speech-recognition technology that YouTube began using to make captions available on a limited number of videos late last year. YouTube’s audience will be able to request captions at the press of a button. Video producers will also be able to download the automated captions and improve upon them. For now, YouTube’s captioning tool will only work on videos with English audio, although there are plans to include more languages. The English audio, however, can be translated into 50 different languages. YouTube, owned by Google, is the Web’s most popular video site. Its users upload about 28,800 hours of video each day. Of course, the speech recognition technology is not perfect, and will get better over time.  This same technology is currently in use with Google Voice, a reincarnation of GrandCentral. See a sample video below where the captions have been machine transcribed: As you can see, I was speaking very clearly and slowly and the technology still was not that great. This has a long way to go, but it is definitely something to stay tuned...

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