On TV.com: TOP 10 Shows CANCELED Too Soon
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

January 21st, 2009

Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration

Posted by Jason Perlow @ 6:22 pm

Categories: Business, Enterprise Computing, General, Personal Technology, Web Technology

Tags: Patient, Barack Obama, Administration, Broadband, Digital Television, TVs, Workforce Management, Tv & Home Theater, Broadband Internet, Network Technology

obamablackberry.jpg

As much as many of us would like to continue to revel in the day, the inauguration with all of its rock-concert fanfare, pomp and circumstance is over, and it is finally time for the new administration to get to work. The 44th President of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama, enters office during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, with our financial institutions and key industries failing, with millions of Americans in fear of losing their jobs and livelihood, and at a time when our nation is engaged in a highly unpopular war, while the ever-present threat of terror still continues to instill fear in all of our citizens.

Also See: Obama Sets Technology Agenda (Zack Whittaker)

These challenges alone should be more than enough to address for any administration. But in the grand tradition of politicians promising far more than what they are capable of delivering on in any single term of office — and as this is a technology news site — I’m going to propose a number of technology initiatives which the Obama administration (which seeks to become more “connected” than any other before it) should set as goals to accomplish during two terms of office. Unlike many of the remaining 47 percent of the country who didn’t see their preferred candidate take the oath, I’m willing to cut the new President some slack, even though I didn’t vote for him.

Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.

Ubiquitous Broadband rollout to the entire country’s infrastructure

As I wrote in a previous piece on the harsh realities of suburban broadband, and from the nature of the followups in the talkbacks, high-speed Internet is still not accessible by a very large portion of Americans, which is estimated to be nearly 50 percent of the population, according to results released in May of 2008  by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation . The Obama administration should provide development incentives to major telecommunications firms,  CLECs and other last-mile ISPs so that every American, with the means to do so, can get affordable DSL, Cable, Fiber, or even alternative forms of Internet broadband, such as Wi-Max and power-line based access.

Ubiquitous and Low-Cost Computing for the entire country

Citizens should be provided tax incentives for purchasing inexpensive new or refurbished computers, particularly those in low income brackets. Should the post-inaugural motto of the new administration be “a netbook in every pot”? Perhaps the administration should consider approaching industry into combining cloud computing for low income families with the previously mentioned broadband initiative, using thin multimedia-capable terminals that could be produced by any number of manufacturers according to an open specification created by a specially formed consortium of industry. Instead of an “OLPC”, this would be “One Terminal Per Family” (OTPF) but without the pitfalls of a misguided not-for-profit. Allow private industry to compete and build the most cost-effective and highest performing solution, with best-of-breed Open Source and Proprietary software.

Green Computing and Green Datacenter tax incentives for all businesses.

Part of the platform which helped President Obama get elected was his intention to try to get this country off fossil fuels, reduce our dependance on foreign oil, and to make our nation a better world citizen by reducing our cumulative carbon footprint. It should seem natural then to extend this platform to reward enterprises with tax and other financial incentives which contribute to this mission that invest in new datacenters and other new infrastructure which consume less energy.

Furthermore, these incentives could be expanded to American (and dare I say it, foreign) hardware manufacturers which produce consumer electronics and computing equipment which are “Green”, and to companies that provide clouded infrastructure as a computing alternative for small and medium businesses as well as private citizens that would otherwise have to host their own systems which would consume unnecessary wattage, as per the Low-Cost Computing initiative above.

Ubiquitous Access to Digital Television

In the weeks before his inauguration, the then President-Elect Obama made a last-minute call to Congress in an attempt to stall the Digital TV transition in February, perhaps because he knew something that many Americans do not — which is like the broadband problem mentioned earlier, and despite years of planning and rollout in all of the key US television markets, many families are unable to receive a good over-the-air Digital TV signal.

The problem is particularly severe in rural areas that are 40-50 miles or more from a major metropolitan area, as the UHF carrier signal that Digital TV uses degrades more severely than the VHF analog signal it is replacing (particularly in bad weather, as rain and snow particles show up as a bigger percentage of its smaller wavelength). Citizens who had good VHF signal in marginal areas may now find they have no UHF reception at all, as VHF transmitted power can be as much as 5 times the amount that the UHF/digital power is. Incidentally, this is one of the reasons why why VHF was chosen over UHF as the primary TV band many years ago. DBS-based Satellite television such as DirecTV and DishNetwork are still too expensive for most private citizens, so we need a better solution.

As areas with  poor Digital TV signal seem to go in concert with those that are unable to receive broadband Internet, a national initiative to get Cable and Fiberoptics to the last mile would kill two birds with one stone.

Ubiquitous Electronic Access to Medical Records by Healthcare Providers

Making all patient medical records electronic would help reduce costs and streamline secure information sharing among providers. It would eliminate the constant faxing and transcribing of records and provide a secure platform by which the relevant confidential patient information would only be presented to the caregivers who really need to know.

We already have the foundations for such a system in VistA, the (Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology Architecture) employed by the Veteran’s Administration, and patient record privacy in HIPPA. The Obama administration should seek to combine these two initiatives so that every medical office, be it the smallest family doctor with private practices in small towns in rural America to the 1000 bed plus hospitals in our largest cities are able to share patient information when it is most critically needed.

Are there other technology-oriented initiatives that the Obama administration should seek to adopt? Talk Back and Let me know.

Jason PerlowJason Perlow is a technologist with over two decades of experience integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Follow jperlow on Twitter

Email Jason Perlow

Subscribe to Tech Broiler via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 116 Talkback(s)
Uh, why did you NOT do this before?
Why did you NOT demand this of your congressmen and
senators before now?

And WHY should we provide ubiquitous ANYthing?... (Read the rest)
Posted by: nancyjones36507@... Posted on: 02/26/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Obama = Socialism...  Christian_<>< | 01/21/09
Just wait...?  Qbt | 01/22/09
and they're going attempt to tell Detroit how to build cars  marks055@... | 01/22/09
Since when does Detroit know how to build cars? nt  T1Oracle | 01/22/09
Since ford started the industry  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/23/09
Evironmental laws prohibit the 65mpg diesel in USA  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
You missed conservation  adr5@... | 01/23/09
Solar can meet ALL our needs  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/23/09
energy of incident sunlight is  frgough | 01/23/09
You can't legislate innovation...  J Galt | 01/23/09
Since when is $250K/yr middle class? nt  T1Oracle | 01/22/09
depends on your city  adr5@... | 01/23/09
Well, what IS $250k?  nancyjones36507@... | 01/23/09
YOU will give your hard earned money away!  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
No, welcome to EUROPE  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/23/09
Since when is it any of your d@mn business  frgough | 01/23/09
Off the deep end, again  Hemlock Stones | 01/23/09
Nothing you can do except vote!  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
The sky is falling! The sky is falling!  MGP2 | 01/24/09
And FOSS is software communism!  Patanjali | 01/22/09
re. and FOSS is software communism!  Bilmekanikeren | 01/22/09
BUZZ! Congratulations, Comic-Book Pseudo-Libertarian! You've Just Violated  drprod@... | 01/22/09
Are you a Nazi?  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
I'm Glad Your Response Is So Objective  J Galt | 01/23/09
Blame Bush  adr5@... | 01/23/09
Look, Ma another Obama voter  frgough | 01/23/09
It's much more scary than taxing  LBiege | 01/23/09
Socialism is a good thing  Hobyx | 01/23/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  Jayce53 | 01/22/09
New is not always better.  adr5@... | 01/23/09
Indeed.  magallanes | 01/23/09
Fact correction  frgough | 01/22/09
yes, but  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 01/22/09
And we aren't now  frgough | 01/22/09
They dont make headlines and dont get to scare people  NoThomas | 01/22/09
I vote that from now on  frgough | 01/22/09
I could say the same about war and military service. nt  T1Oracle | 01/22/09
It is the same  frgough | 01/22/09
Part of being a citizen is self sacrifice  T1Oracle | 01/23/09
we can also say it in our free speech.  nancyjones36507@... | 01/23/09
Incorrect  frgough | 01/23/09
Really incorrect  Hemlock Stones | 01/23/09
Typical  frgough | 01/23/09
"sacrifice your wants"??  LBiege | 01/23/09
OK, try this  Hemlock Stones | 01/23/09
I'm asking for your money  LBiege | 01/23/09
1 or 2 months of Iraq costs would wire the whole US  Aurelious | 01/23/09
already happening.  adr5@... | 01/23/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  Vesicant | 01/22/09
issues and expenditures  coffeeshark | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  wargammer2005 | 01/22/09
this NOT the role of GOVERMENT!!!!!!!!  Dameadows | 01/22/09
NOT Broadband Over Powerlines BPL  brians@... | 01/22/09
Um, worst economy since JIMMY CARTER  Speednet | 01/22/09
Amen!!!  BlueCollarGeek | 01/22/09
You can hope but..  NoThomas | 01/22/09
what did you see?  adr5@... | 01/23/09
It doesn't matter what he does  frgough | 01/22/09
You're a funny one to talk about rationality  Hemlock Stones | 01/23/09
Regardless of the past  wackoae | 01/23/09
Big Gov = Big Taxes  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
Ha!  MGP2 | 01/24/09
And you're blaming Obama?  MGP2 | 01/24/09
OK, let's look at the previous 8 years  Speednet | 01/24/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  shanedr | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  pizzaman7 | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  nzv58l | 01/22/09
Broadband does not equal Internet  Brett Yeagley | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  DaBard | 01/22/09
You think Obama is going to give you access?! HA!  Speednet | 01/23/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  fire1 | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  drewitz@... | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  pebear | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  Update victim | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  Update victim | 01/22/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  jbaviera@... | 01/22/09
And just who will pay for all of this?  Dameadows | 01/22/09
I.R.S.  epcraig | 01/22/09
Clearly ZD/Net Has Turned Into the Elephant's Graveyard  drprod@... | 01/22/09
You have it wrong  Speednet | 01/23/09
God lets hope its only 4 years and not 8!  austins2@... | 01/23/09
Obama ain't done till US ain't prosper  LBiege | 01/23/09
Becareful of spies...  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
I would benefit from these initiatives and I oppose them  nancyjones36507@... | 01/23/09
And living wage jobs so people can afford all this.  HypnoToad | 01/23/09
A chicken in every pot  frgough | 01/23/09
You're on the money  Professor8 | 01/23/09
Are you going to pay for the infrastructure??  wackoae | 01/23/09
e meds is already available for free  Aurelious | 01/23/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  Symbioxys | 01/23/09
8 years?  ElCondor11 | 01/23/09
You can't buy what won't work  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 01/24/09
$10 billion per month on Iraq war  Aussie_Troll | 01/23/09
Look, Ma another Obama voter  frgough | 01/23/09
Um, I don't think he's an Obama voter  MGP2 | 01/24/09
Projected surplus  Aurelious | 01/23/09
Effective living in "the Age of Videography"  bob@... | 01/23/09
20 seconds per house  Aussie_Troll | 01/23/09
Iraq war or energy independence?  Aurelious | 01/23/09
Jason perlow learned a new word!  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/23/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  kdavis1049@... | 01/23/09
No money for medical records yet  Aurelious | 01/23/09
Database will get hacked HUGE MISTAKE!  Christian_<>< | 01/23/09
No government databases  Aurelious | 01/23/09
Great job, Comrade JP!  coolchinamonkey@... | 01/23/09
Mostly disagree.  CobraA1 | 01/23/09
Ubiquitous wireless is a utility  Aurelious | 01/23/09
Liberals act spineless in front of Obama  LBiege | 01/23/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  Richard Platt | 01/23/09
Where in hell  sackbut | 01/23/09
tech initiatives  jiagebusen | 01/23/09
good intentions but a little misguided  Hobyx | 01/23/09
DTV and Broadband and ubiquitous computing  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 01/24/09
RE: Technology initiatives we should demand from the Obama administration  DTansy | 02/13/09
re: HA!  DTansy | 02/13/09
Uh, why did you NOT do this before?  nancyjones36507@... | 02/26/09

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here