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Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
September 26, 2008

Back in 2005, I sat in on a great keynote speech by Brian Halla, CEO and President of National Semiconductor, who talked about the lack of U.S. competitiveness in science and technology. Halla tells the story of the rallying cry among Americans that followed Russia’s launch of Sputnick satellite in 1957, and  the U.S. response with the subsequent voyage to and landing of a man on the moon in 1969. He said the entire nation was behind that feat and a similar effort is required in modern times to revitalize science and technology in the U.S.

 

July 20, 1969, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin stands beside a solar wind experiment on the moon, with the lunar module (LM) in the background. (Source: NASA)

 

In 2005, when discussing what Americans would get behind, Halla said, “'ask anyone, if the government spent $10 billion creating independence from other countries for our energy, for our oil,' would we do it? We'd do it in a heartbeat,” he said, as was reported by Manufacturing and Technology News.1

 

Of course, this was back in 2005 when gasoline prices really weren’t too high.

 

As I sat reading the news this week of the US governments’ emergency financial plans to save our faltering economy, it occurred to me that all of the strategies seem to be stop-gaps, and do nothing to address underlying, long term problems. Of course, I am not an economist – I try to focus on being more in tune with fab engineers and equipment and materials guys who know how to make things work. In light of that, my suggestion for an ailing economy comes from a different perspective:

 

Could we quickly assess how, when and where renewable energies could be most effectively applied in our country and make those investments more attractive to investors – i.e., give reasonable incentives? With the right types of investments, solar energy could reach grid parity in around 2 years. Wind energy, biofuels, electric and hybrid cars and geothermal energy all have their roles to play in different geographic regions and different applications. Best of all, I think the new energy economy has the potential to address our greatest problem right now – job creation.

 

The underlying problem of job loss must be addressed. This isn’t just about manufacturing jobs that have been lost, but engineering and research jobs as well as many higher level jobs that are the inevitable result of a global economy.

 

Instead of taking the very risky move of printing lots of money (which will only lead to inflation) and continuing to bail out institutions that took risks they never should have to begin with, the leaders of this country need to start addressing the big picture to make the economy more stable.

 

I am reminded of something that Halla freely admitted during his keynote. That whenever he gives one of his talks about U.S. competitiveness at technical conferences, one of the key problems is that he’s “preaching to the choir.” This discussion of what we have learned from the semiconductor industry globalization must be taken to the general population.

 

The time is right for the U.S. government to provide strong incentives for renewable energy to create jobs – jobs for engineers and skilled labor. This will fuel our economic recovery, while lessening our reliance on fossil fuel and natural gas suppliers. This is not a partisan issue. It’s a basic business issue involving sound investments and adequate returns – investing in something that can feed upon itself and inspire the next generation of frontiersmen.

 

Reference

K. Jacobson, “National Semiconductor CEO Brian Halla: 'We are Sitting in the Middle of a Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect',” Manufacturing & Technology News, October 12, 2005.


Posted by Laura Peters on September 26, 2008 | Comments (12)


Industries: Business/Market
December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Tom Kunkel, President of Nextendllc.com commented:

I agree, yet propose we drill a bit deeper. Silicon Valley was spawned by that race to the moon and since then we have also neglected to arm our schools and kids with the basic IT tools that resulted. As a result, we are losing our educational prominence and our tech jobs to more qualified graduates from India and China!




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Brady commented:

The folks here in California should abstain from discussion here, until we climb out of 47th of the 50 states in education. We are disqualified on this Technology topic. Here in silicon valley, we hire Indians and Chinese to do the science needed. Invest in our children. (From a Virginian transplanted to silly valley.)




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
MSimon commented:

Unless the technologies produce results at lower costs than current technologies they will be a waste of money. Of course of the costs were lower no government intervention would be required. If the technologies are not cost competitive then the rational approach is to invest in research to make them competitive. However, the number of research jobs will be small and the results will not be immediate.




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
MSimon commented:

Bring back PSSC Physics.




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
TKunkel commented:

I feel your pain Brady, especially as an Illinois citizen...as we are 47th in Job Creation!




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Policebox commented:

First of all, the stopgap measures are needed. They are not long term solutions, but the long term solutions will never happen if the problems aren't held in the short term. Often enough, people think in terms of the old saying "Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day, teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime." Unfortunately, for the followers of this mantra, you must often give the man several fish to give him time to learn. Let us just hope that when the economists are done halting the slide the policymakers will take the necessary steps to bring about a long term solution. Second, except at the University level, the US never did have educational prominance. The scientists that gave us our technical revolution were mostly educated elsewhere. Even the space program, the rockets were designed by Germans and the capsules designed by Canadians. It is usless to say that we must go back to a system we never had. We must create a new system that outperforms anything that has ever existed.




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Ed commented:

I like this idea. What I don't like are the big shots like Barrett who talk about educating our kids in Science and Math and then run off to support the kids in India or where ever so that they can become the next crop of cheap engineering talent either here or outsource. Any smart kids here want to go to the trouble and expense of an engineering degree to join this messed up game?




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Tamza commented:

I hope the current economic situation (can we call it depression, since the 'recession' started last December?) will create a certain amount of protectionism. Free trade is fine if the benefits flow to EVERYONE, but in this case the freer the trade the more we 'export' jobs,, create unemployment, and eventually a HOLLOWING to the core of our technological capabilities .. and an end to the 'service' economy. As long as we place teachers at the BOTTOM Of the pay grade, and financiers at the top, education will keep getting shortchanged; the small number of concerned people will have a hard time bringing about change. Take a look at Japan ... by following our business methods they have DESTROYED themselves as an economic powerhouse ... now they are struggling to get back to the old system ... dont know if they will ever be able to.




December 1, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Jerry Roane commented:

Great piece. We are falling flat on useful education and we do not reward our technologists as much as we do our litigators. PV solar is a win. Couple that with advanced transportation that uses PV as its only power source and we can go a long way toward ending our dependence on foreign oil as well as traffic congestion. The time has come to let the dinosaurs die and be replaced with better more agile competitors with fresh new ideas. All the engineering education in the world will not help if those engineers are tasked with designing better cup holders. It is time to take our energy position seriously and require engineering parameters of cars. Things like legislating an ever decreasing Cd for one simple no-cost to the government start. Each year several design parameters need to be set for constant improvement. Those organizations that cannot improve die off.




December 2, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Vherrera commented:

According to ABC News: Following the Bailout Money Trail. How Does $8.5 Trillion Measure Up? Medicare/Medicaid - $662 Billion Defense - $592 Billion Education - $66 Billion Homeland Security - $41 Billion Why is it that education continue to be at the bottom on the list? How can our students compete with other countries for jobs in science and technology when adecuate funding is not allocated to prepare them. Its not that our students are 'dumb', but rather our government policies and decisions are what is making them 'dumb'.




December 4, 2008
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
Greg commented:

“With the right types of investments, solar energy could reach grid parity in around 2 years. Wind energy, biofuels, electric and hybrid cars and geothermal energy all have their roles …” I know it’s not the main trust of your article, but you omitted a technology that can economically produce large-scale results now: NUCLEAR. All that’s necessary to make it pay off is a change in the regulatory structure. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t be able to build and license a nuke plant in 5 years or less. We could standardize on one scalable, modular design that could provide capacity in units of 400 MW, for example. The greenies need to stop obsessing about an accident that happened 30 years ago (or the policy makers need to start ignoring the greenies). Technology has progressed since TMI.




January 5, 2009
In response to: Halla’s Perfect Storm of Technology Neglect
GregM commented:

The crux of the education dilemma is not money spent, but rather what it is spent on. Technical education needs much smaller, hands-on classes. It is the elegant school of Socrates, on how to approach problems and issues, with facts and discovery. On to Mars via solar power!





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