Lou Gerstner address members of Congress--en#

更新时间:2023-07-23 23:35:55 阅读: 评论:0

德芙巧克力中国世界五百强Lou Gerstner address members of Congress 党员读书心得
On June 14, IBM Chairman and CEO Lou Gerstner spoke before the Joint Economic Committee's first National Summit on High Technology.
The Joint Economic Committee consists of members of the Senate and of the Hou of Reprentatives, drawn from both political parties. The National Summit on High Technology includes three days of hearings, featuring testimony from high-tech industry leaders -- designed to focus on issues that are important to this vital and growing economic gment.
电脑笔Here are Mr. Gerstner's remarks.
Lou Gerstner testifies before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress at the first National Summit on High Technology.
油豆腐的做法Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank you, Senate Majority Leader Lott and Senator Bennett for providing this forum and for the opportunity to participate in this important discussion. I a
m here -- we're all here -- to talk about a revolution. It emanates from the relentless advance of information technology. And it draws sustenance from a new development -- the long-awaited merger of computing and communications to create what is often called a networked economy, or networked society.
But my message today is that the real revolution is not about technology. It is not about a new model of computing bad on the Internet. We are witnessing nothing less than the ri of a new economy -- a digital economy -- and a new global medium that will be the single most important driver of business, economic and social change in the coming century. It will alter the way we teach our sons and daughters, care for our aged, reach out to the disabled and homebound, and enlighten the isolated and dinfranchid. It can create new opportunities to help clo the divide that exists today between the rich and the poor. And it will exert new pressures on existing geopolitical structures and all their underlying economic assumptions.
A world connected by global networks -- by definition -- has more fluid borders. So it will c
hallenge the very nature of the nation-state, shift the ways democracies behave, fundamentally alter the challenges of national curity, and create the first global venue for debate and decisions on issues that affect all the world's people. You might think of it as elevating the concept of the town meeting to a world stage.
Five years ago, using the Net to buy a car, or trade a stock, or earn college credits was revolutionary. So why not envision a day when we vote with much greater convenience -- from our home or workplace. Or a day beyond that, when it's possible to hold a legitimate worldwide referendum in which all people vote as a global statement of individual preference, without regard for conventions like political parties, or national borders?
I am completely convinced that all this is possible. It's not inevitable, but it is certainly possible and attainable, provided we make smart decisions, and importantly, benefit from thoughtful, insightful leadership in the public and private ctors. Becau this is one of tho technological transformations that comes along every hundred years or more and changes all existing models in profound, and permanent ways.
物理高中公式
We've en this before.
The printing press: The proliferation of knowledge and the acceleration of the Renaissance.
The automobile: A redefinition of the concept of distance, the restructuring of metropolitan communities, and the relationship between the workplace and the home.
As with all world-altering technologies, this will take a while. We're probably about 5 years into a 30-year cycle of transformation. But there is simply no doubt that 25 years from now, when people reflect on the minal changes of the early days of the century we are about to begin, the impact of networked computing will stand in relief.
I think I can safely assume that most members of this committee have a view of this networked world that begins with its impact on the individual consumer or the home ur -- with applications for news, entertainment, or online chat. That's understandable. Becau that's where the bulk of the interest and attention has been concentrated.
Let me try to frame the economic, social and governmental implications of what's happening. We're headed for a day when we'll have hundreds of millions of people -- perhaps a billion -- connected to one another and to all of the world's leading institutions and enterpris. Next, and in the not too distant future, we'll add to this mosaic of connections, computing and communications, perhaps a trillion intelligent devices -- all kinds of things, from intelligent cell phones and smart cards to cars, houhold appliances, medical devices, and vending machines. The technology will literally become pervasive -- disappearing into the infrastructure of the home, the workplace, and the world.
黄贤Today, most estimates say there are around 150 million people using the Net worldwide, and the growth rates are astounding. One projection says an average of 62,000 new urs will come online every day for the next five years in the U.S. alone. Even at that rate, most of the growth is occurring outside the United States.

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