Google wants to study 1Tbps fiber download movie only 7 milliseconds

It is reported that Google is accelerating the speed of Internet services Google Fiber (Google Fiber) has an ambitious speed, the ultimate goal is to increase the current 1Gbps speed 1000 times to 1Tbps. Recently, Google Optical Fiber Department posted job advertisements hoping to find an optoelectronics engineer who could challenge innovative Internet technologies "to continuously increase network bandwidth at a cost-saving rate of more than 1Gbps per user." Fast in the end how fast, 1Tbps will be the next important goal, but to achieve a long way to go. If the speed of the internet reaches 1Tbps, it will be inconceivable to download a movie in just 7 milliseconds. Currently, Google Fiber is only available in a few U.S. cities, but 1Gbps is not the fastest and not the fastest. Several companies have released 10Gbps Internet service. The benefits of fiber optic cable are relatively unobtrusive, as London researchers, for example, achieved 1.4Tbps on existing fiber. Much of the current research on 1Tbps fiber seems to focus on the technology that exploits the Internet backbone that carries data between the data center and the continents. While Google's job advertisements do not explicitly mention 1Tbps, it specifically mentions "per-user" traffic that exceeds 1Gbps, suggesting that Google does more than just consider backhaul connections reaching 1Gbps. In response, Google declined to comment.