Office of Science and Technology Policy Blog
Nominations Open for National Medal of Science or National Medal of Technology
Posted by on March 5, 2012 at 11:50 AM EDTLast month, during the second White House Science Fair, White House guest Bill Nye the Science Guy, who also serves as CEO of the Planetary Society, commented on the many successful corporations—including Amazon, Apple, Boeing, Ford, General Motors, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, Pay-Pal, and now Facebook—were started by engineers, people who use science and math to create things and solve problems. He said that for the United States to remain the world leader in technological innovation, we need more engineers and more scientists. We need more people who can do math, design software, and create new applications for machines that have yet to be invented.
Learn more about TechnologyPrivate Sector Partners Convene to Address Global Hunger and Food Security
Posted by on March 2, 2012 at 10:23 AM EDTLast week, representatives from the private sector joined U.S. Government colleagues—from the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, and State, the Agency for International Development, and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation—to discuss potential areas of partnership in support of Feed the Future, the Administration’s global hunger and food security initiative.
Learn more about , Foreign Policy, TechnologyMaking Makers at Georgia Tech
Posted by on February 28, 2012 at 12:37 PM EDTRecently, I interviewed Eric Weinhoffer and Chris Quintero, two undergraduate students who are leaders in Georgia Tech’s Invention Studio. The studio is a 1,000 square foot space that has free-to-use cutting-edge prototyping equipment such as 3D printers, laser and water jet cutters, injection molding machines, and computer-controlled mills and lathes. The heart and soul of the studio are its 50 volunteer undergraduate engineering students who are members of the Georgia Tech Makers Club. They staff the lab, train “newbies,” maintain the equipment, buy new equipment, and offer courses in welding and rocketry. Companies such as Coca-Cola, Ford, John Deere, Autodesk, and Caterpillar help fund the studio because of their interest in hiring students who can design and build just about anything. The studio is a great example of what universities, companies, and students can do to make engineering more approachable, exciting, and personally rewarding – and I hope that more campuses and companies can join forces to invest in programs like Invention Studio. As President Obama said at this year’s White House Science Fair, and reiterated yesterday: “Don’t be bored, make something.”
Q. What are students at Georgia Tech using the studio for?
More than 500 students, staff, and faculty use the facility every semester for research and for class projects associated with more than a dozen Georgia Tech engineering courses. Students also use it for personal “do it yourself” projects and even to design prototypes for their startups. The studio has become a hotbed of multidisciplinary collaboration, since students pursuing different majors are meeting and helping each other out.
One team of mechanical and bioengineering students used the studio to develop AutoRhexis, surgical equipment that is designed to make cataract surgery safer and more cost-effective. Another student team developed Velociryder, a motorized, self-balancing skateboard.
Learn more about Education, TechnologyInternet Privacy: Protecting Consumers, Building Trust, Creating Jobs
Posted by on February 24, 2012 at 1:37 PM EDTYesterday, the White House announced two important steps to promote consumer privacy rights online and to give users more control over how their personal information is handled. First, the White House released a comprehensive roadmap for online privacy protection centered on a Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights and robust enforcement by the Federal Trade Commission. Second, industry has stepped up to the plate by promising to use the "Do Not Track" technology in most major Web browsers to make it easier for users to opt out of receiving ads targeted to them based on their web-surfing habits.
Trust is essential to the continued flourishing of our information economy. With every passing year, we carry out more of our professional and personal lives through the Internet, mobile devices, and other networked technologies. The Internet and mobile telecommunications devices also play a growing role in our economy, as consumers increasingly engage in e-commerce, and more and more products and services become digitized and available online. Last year, online retail sales totaled approximately $200 billion. Because of the power of the Internet, a single innovative idea can quickly grow into a product or service available anywhere in the world. And American companies continue to lead the way in providing these technologies, fueling our export economy and creating high-paying and fulfilling jobs for Americans.
Consumers need to have confidence that companies will handle information about them fairly and responsibly, and that they will have appropriate control over how information about them is used. When consumers provide information about themselves online, they reasonably expect companies to treat this information with respect and to honor certain baseline standards of privacy protection. At the same time, companies need to feel that the rules that apply to them are fair, transparent, predictable, and uniform. Commercial data privacy protections are therefore crucial both for consumer protection and economic growth. The White House report emphasizes:
- Individual control over what personal data organizations collect from them and how they use it
- Transparency that allows consumers to easily understand information about privacy and security practices
- Respect for the context in which consumers provide data
- Security and responsibility in the way companies handle personal data
- Access to personal data in usable format and an ability to correct errors
- Reasonable limits on the personal data that companies collect and retain
- Accountability as to how companies handle personal data
Learn more about TechnologyAdvanced Manufacturing: Cornerstone of an Economy Built to Last
Posted by on February 22, 2012 at 4:32 PM EDTIn his State of the Union address last month, President Obama laid out his blueprint for an economy built to last. And that blueprint, he said, “begins with American manufacturing.”
Today, the National Science and Technology Council is releasing a new “National Strategic Plan for Advanced Manufacturing.” The strategic plan was requested by Congress in the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010, and it builds on the Report to the President on Ensuring American Leadership in Advanced Manufacturing, which was released by the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology in June 2011.
Learn more about TechnologyMulti-National Partnership to Benefit Climate, Health, and Agriculture
Posted by on February 21, 2012 at 11:57 AM EDTSecretary of State Hillary Clinton last week announced the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, a voluntary partnership thast includes the United States, Bangladesh, Canada, Ghana, Mexico, Sweden, and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) to reduce short-lived atmospheric pollutants such as methane, hydrofluorocarbons, and black carbon, or soot. These fast-acting climate pollutants are estimated to be responsible for about a third of global warming over the past 50 years, and are proven to have significant impacts on public health and world food production.
Learn more about Energy and Environment
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