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Archives by Category
American Competitiveness Initiative (86)
CRA (51) Computing Community Consortium (CCC) (14) Computing Education (4) Diversity in Computing (21) Events (21) FY06 Appropriations (13) FY07 Appropriations (32) FY08 Appropriations (35) FY09 Appropriations (13) Funding (180) Misc. (45) People (91) Policy (216) R&D in the Press (75) Research (71) Security (28)
Recent Entries
Science Appears in Final FY 08 Emergency Supplemental, But Only Just Barely
DARPA Management Issues Cost Agency $32 Million A Closer Look at the RAND Report on U.S. Competitiveness in S&T Dichotomy of Women in S&T Chronicle, Citing RAND Report, Claims U.S. S&T is A-OK House CJS Committee Approves Big Increase for NSF... Computing Community Gets Opportunities to Show Off for Congress We're Looking For More Good Peeps! Update on the Supplemental CRA Chair to Testify Before Senate on Climate Modeling
CRA Links
Computing Research News
CRA-Bulletin Computing Data and Resources CRA in the News Computing Research in the FY05 Budget
What We're Reading
Computational Complexity
CNSR Online Danger Room Defense Tech Freedom to Tinker InsideHPC Lessig Blog Nothing is as simple... Reed's Ruminations Schneier on Security Techdirt UMBC eBiquity Blog USACM Tech Policy Blog
Advocacy Materials
IT R&D One-pager (pdf)
DARPA and University Research One-pager (pdf) Cyber Security R&D One-pager (pdf) Current and Requested IT R&D Funding Charts (pdf)
Recent Testimony
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March 13, 2008Gates Tells Congress to Support Research“Research is where it’s at,” Bill Gates said yesterday summing up his (and CRA's, in fact) message for federal funding priorities in a single sentence to the House Science and Technology Committee. The response came in the final minutes of the hearing when Gates was asked what the priority for federal funding should be given that there is a finite amount of federal money to spend and the large number of potential science and technology areas it could be spent on. Gates’ appearance before the committee, his last as Chairman of Microsoft, was in commemoration of the committee’s 50th anniversary. The theme of the hearing was familiar to those in the science and technology realm—Competitiveness and Innovation. Gates’ testimony, both written and in response to questions, followed the arguments he and the rest of the S&T community have been making for the last several years: the urgency for improving STEM education at the K-12 level, the critical need for federal funding of basic research, the importance of attracting the best and the brightest from around the world to U.S. universities, the need to increase diversity in STEM fields, and the requirement that we do whatever we can to retain talent in the U.S. The entire written testimony and a webcast of the hearing are available on the committee web site. In it, Gates, not unexpectedly, highlights the important contributions of information technology and its great potential to aid in solving some of the trickiest problems we face: Computing and software will also play an increasingly central role in scientific research. We are rapidly moving into an era of data-centric computational science in which researchers across a wide range of disciplines routinely use software and computers as essential tools for investigation and collaboration. The ability to use computers to model complex systems is transforming the way we learn about everything from genomics and biosciences to physics and astronomy. In the future, scientific computing will play a profoundly important role in advances that will help us treat diseases, address climate change, and confront many other critical issues....But he raises important questions about whether we're doing all we can to insure the U.S. remains an innovation leader: As I hope these remarks reflect, I am optimistic about the potential for technology to help us find new ways to improve people’s lives and tackle important challenges. I am less optimistic, however, that the United States will continue to remain a global leader in technology innovation. While America’s innovation heritage is unparalleled, the evidence is mounting that we are failing to make the investments in our young people, our workers, our scientific research infrastructure, and our economy that will enable us to retain our global innovation leadership. Update: Some press coverage of the hearing from Forbes, the Washington Post, and one in Inforworld (though the latter focuses almost exclusively on Gates' H-1B testimony). Posted by MelissaNorr at March 13, 2008 03:54 PMPosted to American Competitiveness Initiative | Computing Education | Diversity in Computing | FY09 Appropriations | Funding | People |