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Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter’s The Hill Op-Ed

Read Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter’s op-ed in The Hill on the enormous potential the thriving wireless sector has to bolster our innovation economy here.

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Tags: Consumer Awareness, Consumer Benefits, Innovation, News, White House, President Obama, Wireless Innovation

Connecting America’s Jobs Plan to the Mobile Future

In the upcoming election year, virtually every American will be a 'single-issue voter,' going to the ballot box with the nation's economy and their own job prospects top of mind. It's critical that leaders on both sides of the partisan divide recognize that U.S. mobile policy is a poster-child for just the sort of forward momentum the President and leaders in Congress are seeking to gather to get the nation back on a healthy and sustainable job growth track.

President Obama and Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski have amassed a strong track record in support of mobile innovation, which today puts 2.4 million Americans to work. The crown jewel of these efforts has been their press for more spectrum to power the next wave of mobile Internet-fueled growth.

And, particularly with the Department of Justice's recent aggressive stance with regard to the AT&T/T-Mobile merger, all eyes are on what comes next: Will U.S. innovation policies become more restrictive or continue to build on the proven success of consumer-guided progress coupled with light-touch regulation? As we look for answers that can create jobs and drive innovation, here are five key questions to watch:

Will consumers get more spectrum for the mobile Internet? President Obama and Chairman Genachowski are right to make today's spectrum crunch a national priority. A recent report by Credit Suisse finds that U.S. wireless networks run at 80% of capacity on a typical day, well above our global competitors. And, this isn't a race we want to win. Analysis by Peter Rysavy finds that without additional spectrum, U.S. wireless networks will run out of capacity within four years. There is no higher innovation policy priority than averting such a disastrous--and avoidable--outcome.

Will policymakers make the connection between spectrum and jobs? If the President is successful in his push for an additional 500 MHz of spectrum to support the mobile Internet, we can create 500,000 American jobs and add $400 billion to the nation's GDP. And, that forecast doesn't include the biggest job creator of all--the 'X-factor' of the next Facebook or Google--that will inevitably arise out of a more spectrum-rich environment. All the government needs to do to nurture this growth (and raise billions in auction proceeds for the U.S. Treasury) is put more spectrum up for sale.

Will the markets see a balanced outcome for AT&T/T-Mo? The Department of Justice's challenge to the AT&T-T-Mobile merger has been met with pointed expressions of concern from Silicon Valley to Wall Street. Matt Murphy of respected Sand Hill Road VC firm Kleiner Perkins noted the move has put tech investment "in stalemate mode." The Administration is right to ask tough questions about the merger. But its ability to avoid a protracted court battle and deliver a timely and constructive outcome will signal to the markets that a steady hand is at the economic helm.

Will regulators' definition of competition keep pace with the market? Even with a combined AT&T/T-Mo, American consumers have far more choices for their mobile service than most of our country's leading global competitors. Many other benchmarks must come into play to get a true gauge of competition. Case in point: The recent revelation that Sprint, with its Clearwire assets, has more spectrum holdings in an average city than both Verizon and a combined AT&T and T-Mobile. This puts into a whole new light Sprint's vocal objections to the merger on the grounds that its market rival doesn't need more spectrum. Clearly, it does to compete.

Will jobs policy value the role of small tech entrepreneurs? Over the past 15 years, small firms created 64% of new jobs in this country.[1] In the tech industry, 40% of workers are employed by small businesses. Without adequate spectrum, these innovators won't have the opportunity to create the next best thing--or the jobs that come with it.

At the beginning of the year, President Obama used his State of the Union address to call on policymakers to "make it possible for businesses to deploy the next generation of high-speed wireless coverage to 98 percent of all Americans." Now is the time for our leaders--in the Administration and on Capitol Hill--to take concrete steps to make good on that promise and send a clear signal to the market that U.S. innovation policy will remain steady, balanced and constructive. They should start by recognizing that our nation's jobs policy and our innovation policy must be one and the same.

Jonathan Spalter, chairman of Mobile Future, has been founding CEO of leading technology, media, and research companies, including Public Insight, Snocap, and Atmedica Worldwide. He served as an advisor to and spokesperson for Vice President Al Gore during the Clinton administration.

Mobile Future is a 501(c)(4) coalition comprised of and supported by technology businesses, non-profit organizations and individuals dedicated to advocating for an environment in which innovations in wireless technology and services are enabled and encouraged. For a full list of members and sponsors and to learn more about the coalition, go to www.mobilefuture.org.

This article was originally published on Huffington Post.

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Tags: Competition, Congress, Consumer Awareness, Consumer Benefits, Huffington Post, Innovation, News, President Obama, Spectrum, White House, Wireless Innovation

Wireless as Job Stimulator in President Obama’s American Jobs Act

The Obama Administration signaled its intention to include a measure to expand wireless coverage and increase mobile spectrum as part of the American Jobs Act.  Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter responded to the measure, stating:

“We applaud the President’s recognition of the crucial role mobile broadband can play in spurring job growth and boosting the nation’s economy. Recent data shows that making additional spectrum available for wireless will lead to 500,000 new jobs in America. We strongly encourage lawmakers to make more wireless spectrum available quickly to meet exploding consumer demand, fuel our technology-driven economy, and unleash investment and new economic opportunities.”

To read the full statement, go here.

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Tags: Consumer Awareness, Consumer Benefits, Innovation, Mobile Future, News, President Obama, Spectrum, White House, Wireless Innovation

Mobile Future at White House Spectrum Summit

Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter attended the White House Summit,“Spectrum Auctions: Unlocking the Innovative Potential of Wireless Broadband,” where leaders in the technology sector, policymakers and top economists discussed how freeing up spectrum will benefit the economy, consumers and expand wireless coverage across the U.S.

In a statement released after the event, Spalter said:

“Today’s White House spectrum summit underscores the broad recognition that growing consumer demand for wireless technologies and mobile innovations are fundamentally transforming our nation’s economic future. Efficiently and responsibly making more spectrum available through incentive auctions is critical to help meet President Obama’s ambitious goal of expanding access to wireless broadband to 98 percent of Americans.”

To read the full statement, click here.

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Tags: Mobile Future, News, President Obama, Spectrum, White House, Wireless Innovation

Mobile Future Chairman on President Obama’s Expanded Wireless Access Initiative

President Obama today announced a new Expanded Wireless Access Initiative intended to help achieve his goal of increasing high speed wireless coverage to 98% of Americans. Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter responded to the Initiative, stating: 

“President Obama’s Expanded Wireless Access Initiative is a testament to the tremendous role mobile technology plays when it comes to achieving the Administration’s goals of “out-innovating, out-educating, and out-building the rest of the world.”

“We appreciate President Obama’s leadership in creating an unprecedented Administration-wide focus on expanding access to high speed broadband for Americans.  The wireless sector is already evolving at an astounding pace and this initiative sets the course for the next wave of mobile opportunities with even more economic growth and continued job creation. While today’s announcement is yet another big step in the right direction, it’s critical that the President and his Administration do all they can to maintain an environment that encourages investment and innovation in today’s highly competitive wireless eco-system."

To read the full statement, click here.

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Tags: President Obama, White House, Wireless Broadband, Wireless Innovation, Mobile Broadband Growth

State of the Union Highlights Mobile Opportunities

In his State of the Union address last night, President Obama committed to setting policies that promote mobile investment and innovation, stating “within the next five years, we will make it possible for business to deploy the next generation of high-speed wireless coverage to 98% of all Americans.” More details are still to come, but this is a great recognition of the key role that wireless plays in connecting the nation and spurring economic growth.

Here are the president’s comments on wireless from the speech:

     “Within the next five years, we will make it possible for business to deploy the next generation of high-speed wireless coverage to 98% of all Americans. This isn’t just about a faster internet and fewer dropped calls. It’s about connecting every part of America to the digital age.  It’s about a rural community in Iowa or Alabama where farmers and small business owners will be able to sell their products all over the world. It’s about a firefighter who can download the design of a burning building onto a handheld device; a student who can take classes with a digital textbook; or a patient who can have face-to-face video chats with her doctor.”

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Tags: Congress, President Obama, Spectrum, White House, Wireless Broadband, Wireless Innovation, Mobile Broadband Growth

On The President’s Desk: Furthering the Success of ADA & Wireless

President Obama will sign The 21st  Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act tomorrow- updating the Americans With Disabilities Act while emphasizing the important role new telecom technologies have had on those with disabilities.  The act will not only increase the use of closed captioning on the internet, but it will also upgrade the way emergency information is communicated.  To read more about how wireless technology can improve the quality of life for individuals with disabilities, click here.

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Tags: Congress, Legislation, Mobile Health, News, President Obama, White House, Wireless Innovation, mHealth, Mobile Ability

Stay informed and civically engaged with government apps

Better late than never to the app game, the feds have relaunched usa.gov, complete with a suite of free mobile applications from federal agencies that run the gamut and seek to close the technology gap between the private sector and the federal government.  With so much information to wade through at the federal level, many citizens often find themselves unsure of where to go to for vital information (tax deadlines, etc).  White House officials are hoping that this new app suite will put more information in the hands of all Americans and further contribute to the administration’s goal of increased transparency.

Planning a summer trip? Check the latest safety guidelines with the TSA app.  Head in the clouds? Go on a space odyssey with NASA’s application.  All eighteen apps are free and available now to help you get engaged!

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Tags: Applications, Congress, Mobile Applications, White House, Associations and Government Agencies

Mobile Momentum: The Proof is in the Numbers

Consumer confidence remains low in today’s tough economy, but the Pew Internet and American Life Project’s new Mobile Access in 2010 report  illustrates a contrarian streak among U.S. consumers when it comes to the mobile marketplace. Across ages and demographics, Americans are showing a remarkable bullishness when it comes to the value and innovation they see in their wireless purchases. In fact, usage of connected devices and applications continues to grow at an unabated and staggering pace.

Over the past year, the number of Americans connecting wirelessly to the Internet is up 8 percentage points, with six out of 10 Americans now using their smartphone or laptop to access the Internet. In fact, more Americans now use their mobile device to connect to the Internet (38%) than play a game on their device (34%). And, it’s not just young millennials gravitating to the nexus of wireless and the Internet. Their parents—folks in the 30 to 49 year old age bracket—are now leading the growth.

African Americans and Latinos also continue to lead in mobile connectivity. Two-thirds of both communities are wireless Internet users. And, African Americans and Latinos continue to outpace whites when it comes to cell phone ownership (87% versus 80%).

These insights illuminate the wireless debate at a pivotal moment, coming on the heels of President Obama’s Executive Order announcing his Administration’s intention to increase the amount of spectrum available to meet consumers’ fast-growing mobile needs. Pew’s methodical documentation of a steep adoption and usage growth trajectory—cutting broadly across the U.S. population—powerfully illustrates the profound importance of these spectrum allocation efforts and the equally essential need to safeguard policies that encourage the billions of dollars in investment needed to get this spectrum into use across the country. This process can take six to 10 years to complete, from the announcement of auctions to the deployment of actual networks, so we need to get started now.

Unfortunately as temperatures rise in Washington (both literally and metaphorically), it seems no debate is safe from the partisan pull of election-year politics. Even U.S. wireless policy, which has enjoyed bipartisan support for a light-tough regulatory framework through both Republican and Democratic administrations, is getting dragged into the pro-regulation and heated rhetorical fray.

It’s hard to justify given the frenetic pace of competition across the mobile landscape. Verizon and Google recently have gone public with their ambitions to challenge the AT&T/Apple iPad alliance. HP, Dell and others also are in hot pursuit. Cox is becoming the first U.S. cable company to directly offer wireless services. Regional players like Leap Wireless and MetroPCS are thriving. And, the Palm Pre was recently offered to consumers for the jaw-dropping price of a single cent. Consumer choices of service providers, plans, devices and applications abound.

All of this, of course, only further fuels the leaps and bounds we’re now seeing in mobile Internet adoption and usage. The arrival of dispassionate, data-driven reports like this Pew contribution are essential to constructive policy conversation that benefit consumers and innovators alike.

The data also clearly illustrates just how deeply mobile connectivity is working its way into our lives, and just how enthusiastically consumers are responding to the profound innovation it is making possible.

As the Federal Communications Commission takes a closer look at wireless, it’s important that it consider how consumers are actually embracing mobile connectivity in their diverse lives. And, it is imperative that the FCC acknowledge that all of this progress we celebrate now has taken place in—and been made possible in no small part by—the current light-touch regulatory framework.

The proof is in the numbers. As the mercury rises in the nation’s capital, it’s important that cooler heads prevail when it comes to the flexibility and dynamism that have truly connected the nation to the opportunities and innovation made possible by the mobile Internet.

This article was orginially published on Huffington Post.

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Tags: Apple, Applications, AT&T, Competition, Consumer Benefits, Economy, Wireless Investment, FCC, Hispanics, Huffington Post, Mobile Applications, Mobile Future, Mobile Future Board, Jonathan Spalter, Pew Research Center, Smartphone, Spectrum, Verizon, White House, President Obama, Wireless Innovation

Presidential Memorandum Nearly Doubles Available Wireless Spectrum

Today, President Obama signed a presidential memorandum that aims to make available for auction some 500 megahertz of spectrum that is now controlled by the federal government and private companies.

Responding to this measure, Mobile Future Chairman Jonathan Spalter issued the following statement:

“We appreciate President Obama’s leadership and foresight in paving the way to efficiently and responsibly make more spectrum available to keep pace with wireless innovation and consumer demand. Today’s presidential memorandum sets the course for the next wave of mobile opportunities that will lead to economic growth and continued job creation. This announcement is a step in the right direction and it’s critical that the Obama Administration remains focused on spurring growth rather than imposing restrictive regulations that could paralyze the economic recovery, job growth and investment we see in today’s thriving wireless sector.”

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Tags: Economy, Job growth, Mobile Future, Mobile Future Board, Jonathan Spalter, Spectrum, White House, President Obama

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