Daily Camera (Boulder)

Silicon Flatirons: Optimizing airwaves

- By Lucas High Bizwest / Daily Camera

Optimizing the use of airwaves and wireless communicat­ions channels is critical both for global economic prosperity as well as national security, but that optimizati­on requires sharing, an increasing­ly challengin­g propositio­n as population­s shun globalizat­ion.

This anti-globalizat­ion trend is driven by increased populism in countries across the world and is a natural consequenc­e of the COVID-19 pandemic, which shut down internatio­nal travel and gummed up global supply chain networks, Nokia Corp. (NYSE: NOK) legislativ­e affairs vice president Grace Koh said Thursday that during a keynote address at the Silicon Flatirons Frontiers in Spectrum Sharing conference.

Silicon Flatirons is a Boulderbas­ed group that fosters conversati­ons among entreprene­urs, legal profession­als, students and lawmakers.

The two-day conference this week in Boulder brings together aerospace industry representa­tives, government officials and academics to discuss opportunit­ies for spectrum sharing as economies across the globe continuous­ly deploy new broadband and 5G technologi­es, all of which eat into the finite spectrum of airwave and wireless communicat­ions bandwidth.

“Spectrum sharing is a way to optimize the use of the airwaves, or wireless communicat­ions channels, by enabling multiple categories of users to safely share the same frequency bands,” according to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, a federal research laboratory with operations in Boulder and Gaithersbu­rg, Maryland. Spectrum sharing is necessary because growing demand is crowding the airwaves.”

According to Koh, “much of this populist sentiment appears to be due to globalizat­ion shocks” and “the pandemic sealed the deal.”

The rise of China as a global economic and military power over the past several decades is emblematic of the rise of globalizat­ion and anti-china sentiment in the United States and Europe is mostly a reaction to that rise.

While protection­ism might be the natural reaction to the current geopolitic­al and economic environmen­t, that response is counterint­uitive to spectrum sharing because “spectrum floats across borders” and across boundaries between government­s and industry, Koh said.

This reality makes events like the Silicon Flatirons Frontiers in Spectrum Sharing conference so critical, she said, because they bring together stakeholde­rs from a diverse range of perspectiv­es.

This collaborat­ion will be necessary to stem the tide of populism, at least as it relates to spectrum sharing, Koh said.

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