Elon University
The prediction, in brief:

An advisory committee of 30 people will help the administration ‘to be very serious about the most important issues … The NII is part of a revolution changing how we work, live, play and will proceed in starts and fits like the early American new frontiers.

Predictor: Barram, David

Prediction, in context:

John December wrote the following article about remarks that United States Deputy Secretary of Commerce David Barram made as opening speaker of the National Net ’94 conference in Washington, D.C. ”Barram traced changes that have transformed national priorities and outlined how the National Information Infrastructure (NII) is vital to US long-term interests. Barram described how the economy has been transformed into a global, service-oriented one following the breakup of the Soviet Union. He said we must ‘be quick but don’t hurry’ to seize the opportunities these changes offer. Barram related how his own children seem to be comfortable in a stimulus overload, watching television, doing homework, and playing video games all at once. He mused that they’ve developed ‘highly parallel processors’ to use information. He cited his childrens’ use of media as one example of how people can intensively use mediated communication. To seize the opportunities presented by these political and economic changes, the NII, according to Barram, will gain the ‘fruits of the information age’ and to make the U.S. ‘freer and more productive.’ Barram outlined the goals of the NII: to continue to develop, articulate, and promote the use of networks in the private sector; and to examine the issues universal service, technical innovation, reliability, and intellectual property rights. An advisory committee of 30 people will help the administration ‘to be very serious about the most important issues.’ Barram stressed that the NII is a public/private partnership, and recalled Vice President [Al] Gore’s statement that the information industry is going into the ‘bit business.’ Barram said the NII is part of a revolution changing how we ‘work, live, play’ and will proceed in ‘starts and fits’ like the early American ‘new frontiers.'”

Date of prediction: April 7, 1994

Topic of prediction: Information Infrastructure

Subtopic: General

Name of publication: Computer-Mediated Communication

Title, headline, chapter name: U.S. National Information Infrastructure Linked to National Wealth

Quote Type: Partial quote

Page number or URL of document at time of study:
http://www.december.com/cmc/mag/1994/may/barram.html

This data was logged into the Elon/Pew Predictions Database by: Anderson, Janna Quitney