politics

Democrats tout broadband support

PC World teases out the little bit of tech in the Democratic Party's convention platform. It includes a brief mention of support for universal access to broadband .

Both Bush and Kerry have said more on the issue. Bush is betting on streamlining regulations and continued tax-free access to reach universal access by 2007. Kerry goes a little farther, advocating 20 percent tax credits for companies that invest in next generation networks.

My phone also does dishes

Hewlett-Packard and T-Mobile will distribute a new version of the iPaq handheld that can bounce back and forth between cellular and Wi-Fi networks. It's a phone, it's a camera, it's an MP3 player, and it can leap tall buildings in a single bound.

I have mixed feelings about all-in-one devices . None of them are going to make me throw away my digital camera or my MP3 player, at least not yet. But the network-switching function is a step forward. I use my cell phone at least half the time at home (since I don't use a … Read more

Broadband for sports nuts

I'm a fantasy sports addict. There, I said it.

I'm not sure why it's so addictive because, from an objective point of view, it's really geeky. You get a bunch of friends, sit around for three hours and draft real-life players onto your fantasy team. Then you compete against your friends to see whose team can compile the best scores based on the real-life statistics. Add in doses of trash-talking, taunting, elevated pride and burnt egos, and you get the idea of why there are 7 million fantasy sports players in the United States.

Broadband exacerbates … Read more

Do we have any idea what we're doing?

You tell us. This blog, as much as this package, is an experiment. Throughout much of this year, News.com is highlighting critical technology issues that are playing into electoral politics. Broadband is one of those, and you can see the results here over the next few days. We've spent a lot of time looking at the issues, talking to experts and policymakers, and we're taking an unusual step for us, backing a few policies we think would help broadband expand. More about that Tuesday, when that story goes live.

But this blog is an experiment too. We … Read more

Intel expands abroad--again

Intel to expand Irish manufacturing facilities Intel said at its stockholder meeting today it plans to spend $2 billion to build a new plant in Ireland. This isn't a radical change in strategy. Long before outsourcing became a hot potato, Intel was busy creating a network of manufacturing and research facilities around the globe. Craig Barrett figures it this way: If Intel is a global corporation that derives most of its revenues from non-U.S. sources--72 percent, to be precise--why not expand its footprint around the world? (For what it's worth, the Americas accounted for just 28 percent … Read more

Good, bad or indifferent?

Study supports controversial offshore numbers Both the pro and con camps now have new numbers to back up their arguments. The revised Forrester numbers project a loss of 3.4 million U.S. jobs over the next 11 years. Depending on where you sit in this debate, that's either major cause for alarm or business as usual. The upward revision is only slightly more than the 3.3 million figure Forrester came up with two years ago.

But here's what caught my eye: The report suggests that all the noise made by antioffshoring activists has paradoxically, helped accelerate … Read more

Lies, damned lies....and statistics

Monday's D-Day for outsourcing junkies when Forrester Research issues its long-awaited study on the number of American jobs being sent offshore. Forrester helped fan the fires of this debate a couple of years back when it predicted the U.S. would lose 3.3 million jobs. I can't help wondering whether offshoring would have turned into such a big campaign issue for 2004 had the economy not undergone a recession and subsequent slow-growth recovery. John McCarthy, who authored the original report, complained to the Wall Street Journal earlier this spring that he was miffed how people were seizing … Read more

Indian election: What does it mean?

I wonder whether the preliminary results of India??s parliamentary vote will impact the country's future as an outsourcing hotbed. Looks as if the ruling BJP is going to lose a lot of seats to the Congress Party. Could that result in a cooling--or even reversal--of India's welcoming stance on foreign-owned companies setting up shop?

Floor is open. Who will last the tango? Meanwhile good news on the jobs front in Silicon Valley. After announcing a helluva strong quarter, Cisco announced plans to hire up to 1,000 salesmen and engineers--mostly in the United States.

Lieberman gets religion

What do you know? Joe Lieberman says Uncle Sam needs to think up new ways to deal with the human costs of offshore outsourcing--including the possibility of wage-loss insurance.What was once a far-out idea is quickly gaining currency with the mainstream. The same sentiment was reflected in the results of the CNET-Harris Interactive poll we published last week. My take is that the numbers reflect the enlightened self-interest of many--though not a majority--in the business world.

During the TiE gig, I broached the question, only to have Sequoia Capital's Doug Leone dump all over it. I didn't … Read more

Indian ex-pats in the Valley

Received some interesting feedback on my last post. Several readers took me to task for mentioning the race issue, accusing me of searching out an issue that does not exist. Maybe, maybe not.

On Friday, I dropped by the offices of The Indus Entrepreneurs, which was hosting a press reception in advance of their big conference later this week. One of the folks I spoke with was Kanwal Rekhi, one of the big names in the Indian-American high-tech community. Rekhi is aware of the "Lou Dobbs" effect, but he nonetheless believes things are a lot better for Indian … Read more