Sentinel & Enterprise

The shrinking digital divide

Biden sits atop a technologi­cal revolution, but isn’t leading it

- By Llewellyn King

When we look back on the convulsion that is going to reset America — the great technology­driven revolution that will extend to nearly every corner of American life — it may be named for President Joe Biden, but it won’t be his revolution. It is innovation’s revolution. He will help finance it and smooth it out, but it is already happening and is accelerati­ng.

Biden’s typically soft speech to Congress (no stemwinder he) was a wish list of things dear to him, but also an acknowledg­ment of what already is in motion.

Technology is rampant and government’s role should be to provide partnershi­p and, above all, standards, according to two savants of the tech world, Jeffrey DeCoux, chairman of the Autonomy Institute, and Morgan O’Brien, a visionary in U.S. wireless telecommun­ications, now executive chairman of Anterix, a company providing private broadband wireless networks to utilities. Above all, they said in an interview with me for the PBS program “White House Chronicle,” standards for the new technology are essential.

Partial interconne­ction with different appliances, from road sweepers to drone delivery vehicles speaking only to identical devices, will be self-defeating. The internet without internatio­nal standards would have failed.

Biden is set to preside over the greatest industrial leap forward since steam provided shaft horsepower to make factories a reality. If Congress allows, the Biden administra­tion will finance much of the upgrading of the old infrastruc­ture. It also will be called upon to be part of the new infrastruc­ture, the technologi­cal one. That will be expensive; both DeCoux and O’Brien warned that it will take huge sums of money to build out complete 5G broadband networks, which will carry the load of interconne­ctivity.

For the nation to leap forward, these networks need to bring 5G broadband to every corner of it, O’Brien said. It can’t be allowed to serve only those places where population density makes it profitable, like cities.

In his speech to Congress, Biden laid out a revolution­ary abstract for the future of the nation. The human side of the Biden infrastruc­ture plan — things like daycare, free community college, better health care, prescripti­on drug pricing — is the true Biden agenda.

The technology revolution is seen by the president not for what it is, a resetting of everything in America, but rather as a

way to job creation. It will create jobs, but that isn’t the driving force. The driver is and has been innovation: science helping people. That, in turn, will bring about a surge of productivi­ty and prosperity, and with that, new jobs, quality jobs – robots will soon be flipping hamburgers and painting houses.

This other agenda, the one that will make the fundamenta­l difference between the nation of today and the nation of tomorrow, is the technologi­cal revolution. The evolutiona­ry forces for this upheaval have been gathering since the microproce­ssor started things moving in the 1970s.

At the core of the coming changes is interconne­ctivity. That is what will craft the future. Cars on highways will be connected with each other through thousands of sensors, and these will speed traffic and enhance safety both for those with drivers and new autonomous ones. Likewise, drones will deliver many goods and they will need to be interconne­cted and have superior flight management. Every aspect of endeavor will be involved, from managing railroads to increasing electricit­y resilience and the productivi­ty of the electric infrastruc­ture.

In an interview on the Digital Roundtable, a webinar from Texas State University, this week, Arshad Mansoor, president of the Electric Power Research Institute, said improved interconne­ctivity could increase available electricit­y from dams and power plants often without new constructi­on. He explained that interconne­ctivity wouldn’t only be essential to managing diverse generating sources, like wind and solar, but also in wringing more out of the whole system.

Technology has gotten us through the pandemic. Most obviously in the huge speed at which vaccines were developed, but also in our ability to meet virtually and the effectiven­ess of online ordering and delivery.

By nature, and by record, Biden is a get-along-go-along politician, a zephyr, as we heard in his address to Congress. But history looks as though it will cast him as a transforma­tive president, a notable leader presiding over great winds of change.

The evolutiona­ry forces for this upheaval have been gathering since the microproce­ssor started things moving in the 1970s.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN / AP ?? Visitors attend the China Beijing Internatio­nal High Tech Expo, where 5G technology took center stage, in September.
NG HAN GUAN / AP Visitors attend the China Beijing Internatio­nal High Tech Expo, where 5G technology took center stage, in September.
 ?? ROBYN BECK / AFP ?? Attendees wait in line for a 5G exhibition at the Qualcomm booth during 2019’s CES consumer electronic­s show in Las Vegas.
ROBYN BECK / AFP Attendees wait in line for a 5G exhibition at the Qualcomm booth during 2019’s CES consumer electronic­s show in Las Vegas.

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