National Academies Press: OpenBook

Keeping the U.S. Computer Industry Competitive: Defining the Agenda (1990)

Chapter: B: Colloquium Participants

« Previous: A: Colloquium Program
Suggested Citation:"B: Colloquium Participants." National Research Council. 1990. Keeping the U.S. Computer Industry Competitive: Defining the Agenda. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1497.
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Page 75
Suggested Citation:"B: Colloquium Participants." National Research Council. 1990. Keeping the U.S. Computer Industry Competitive: Defining the Agenda. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1497.
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Page 76
Suggested Citation:"B: Colloquium Participants." National Research Council. 1990. Keeping the U.S. Computer Industry Competitive: Defining the Agenda. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1497.
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Page 77

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Appendix B Colloquium Participants Norman Achilles, U.S. Department of State Donald M. Austin, U.S. Department of Energy David Beck, U.S. International Trade Commission Laszlo A. Belady, Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation Brian C. Belanger, U.S. Department of Commerce C. Gordon Bell, Stardent Computer, Inc. Kathleen C. Bernard, Cray Research, Inc. Joel Bimbaum, Hewlett Packard Company Jane Bortnick, Library of Congress Michael Boudin, U.S. Deparunent of Justice Charles Brownstein, National Science Foundation James H. Burrows; U.S. Department of Commerce Virginia Castor, U.S. Department of Defense Skip Dalton, Digital Equipment Corporation Ambassador Peter Jon de Vos, U.S. Depa'1rnent of State John L. Doyle, Hewlett Packard Company C. F. Emde, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Charles H. Ferguson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Samuel H. Fuller, Digital Equipment Corporation Oliver Grave, Federal Trade Commission Bruce Guile, National Academy of Engineering William R. Hambrecht, Hambrecht & Quist Christopher H. Hankin, U.S. Department of State Jeffrey M. Helter, Electronic Data Systems 75

76 Lee Holcomb, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Kenwin Jarboe, Senate Subcommittee on Government Information and Regulation Raymond L. Jones, U.S. Department of Commerce Robert E. Kahn, Corporation for National Research Initiatives Philip Kardis, Senate Committee on Budget William M. Kendall-Johnston, U.S. Department of State V. N. Kryuvov, Embassy of the U.S.S.R. Alfred M. Lee, U.S. Department of Commerce Robert W. Lucky, AT&T Bell Laboratories William Maher, Federal Communications Commission John E. McPhee, U.S. Department of Commerce Samuel Merrill, Jr., Library of Congress George P. Millburn, U.S. Department of Defense Katie Miller, Senate Judiciary Committee Gordon E. Moore, Intel Corporation James H. Morris, Carnegie Mellon University James M. Murphy, Jr., Office of the U.S. Trade Representative David B. Nelson, U.S. Department of Energy Michael R. Nelson, Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation James D. Otis, Supercomputer Systems, Inc. Charles T. Owens, National Science Foundation Abraham Peled, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center Jorge Perez-Lopez, U.S. Department of Labor Alan J. Perlis, Yale University N. Scott Phillips, House Armed Services Committee James R. Porter, National Academy of Engineering Clyde V. Prestowitz, Jr., Carnegie Endowment J. Mark Pullen, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Raj Reddy, Carnegie Mellon University William A. Reinsch, Office of Senator John Heinz Cesare Rosati, U.S. Department of State Richard S. Rosenbloom, HaIvard University Gary Russell, U.S. Department of Labor Steven Saboe, U.S. Department of State Liz Sadove, House Committee on Energy and Commerce William Scherlis, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Jacob Schwartz, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Mary Shaw, Carnegie Mellon University Michael Ska~zynsky, U.S. Department of Commerce V. Slavyantsev, Embassy of the U.S.S.R. William J. Spencer, Xerox Corporation APPENDIX B

APPENDIX B Stephen L. Squires, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Will Stackhouse, Jet Propulsion Laboratory David J. Teece, University of California at Berkeley Lawrence G. Tester, Apple Computer, Inc. Andre M. van Tilborg, Office of Naval Research Patrick A. Toole, IBM Corporation Paul A. Turner, Price Waterhouse Technology Center Thomas A. Weber, National Science Foundation Harvey Weiss, Digital Equipment Corporation Ambassador E. Allan Wendt, U.S. Department of State Robert M. White, Control Data Corporation Robert M. White, National Academy of Engineering Mary Wileden, U.S. Department of the Treasury Sam R. Willcoxon, AT&T Deborah Wince-Smith, U.S. Department of Commerce Irving Wladawsky-Berger, IBM Corporation William Wulf, National Science Foundation Sty Marjory S. Blumenthal, Executive Director Damian M. Saccocio, Staff Officer Margaret A. Knemeyer, Staff Associate Mark Bello, CSTB Consultant Pamela R. Rodgers, CSTB Consultant Donna F. Allen, Administrative Secretary Catherine A. Sparks, Secretary 77

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This book warns that retaining U.S. preeminence in computing at the beginning of the next century will require long-term planning, leadership, and collective will that cannot be attained with a business-as-usual approach by industry or government. This consensus emerged from a colloquium of top executives from the U.S. computer sector, university and industry researchers, and government policymakers.

Among the major issues discussed are long-term, or strategic, commitment on the part of large firms in the United States; cooperation within and among firms and between industry, universities, and government; weaknesses in manufacturing and in the integration of research, development, and manufacturing; technical standards for both hardware and software manufacture and operation; and education and infrastructure (in particular, computer networks).

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