High-Speed Internet Spawns Prairie Start-Ups

Around the corner from an antiques district in Kansas City, Kan., a group of entrepreneurs and computer programmers are trying to spawn a six-block Silicon Valley in a quiet, residential area that on Tuesday began boasting the world’s fastest residential Internet service.

Google Inc. chose Spring Valley and Hanover Heights, a strip of homes just south of the University of Kansas Medical Center, as the first neighborhoods to receive a fiber-optic broadband network that boasts speeds up to 150 times as fast as the average online feed in the U.S.

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Along with original content and posts from across the Dow Jones network, this section of AllThingsD includes Must-Reads From Other Web Sites — pieces we’ve read, discussions we’ve followed, stuff we like. Six posts from external sites are included here each weekday, but we only run the headlines. We link to the original sites for the rest. These posts are explicitly labeled, so it’s clear that the content comes from other Web sites, and for clarity’s sake, all outside posts run against a pink background.

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