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National Coordination Office for Networking and Information Technology Research and Development
 
 
 
 

Information Technology: The 21st Century Revolution
Transmittal Letter
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Letter from Neal Lane


 

The White House


Washington
 
September 25, 2000
 

Members of Congress:
 
I am pleased to forward with this letter Information Technology: The 21st Century Revolution, a report prepared by the Interagency Working Group on Information Technology Research and Development of the National Science and Technology Council's Committee on Technology. This report supplements the President's FY 2001 Budget and highlights the Information Technology Research and Development (IT R&D) program's FY 2000 accomplishments and FY 2001 plans.
 
Our Nation is enjoying unprecedented prosperity and possibilities, built primarily on decades of Federally-funded innovations in science and technology that were translated by U.S. businesses into new products and services. The case for adequate and sustained Federal investments in R&D is made most dramatically in the information technology sector. Since 1995, more than a third of all U.S. economic growth has resulted from IT enterprises. Today, more than 13 million Americans hold IT-related jobs, which are being added six times faster than the rate of overall job growth.
 
Today's Federal IT R&D program enables the advancement of the technologies needed in software, information infrastructures, and applications in support of both the Nation's scientific and socio-ecomonic goals. These advances will foster development of a world-class educational system, high-quality health care, as well as ensuring continued economic growth and a strong national defense. New computing and information infrastucture technologies will provide for the secure and confidential delivery of the tomorrow's IT-related products and services to our homes, schools and businesses.

This report describes all aspects of the interagency IT R&D program -- the base High Performance computing and Communications (HPCC) Program, the Next Generation Internet (NGI) initiative, as well as the new activities begun under last yearŐs Information Technology for the Twenty-First Century (IT2) initiative, and our proposed FY 2001 increment -- as a single integrated program. As in previous years, this portfolio is a well-coordinated multi-agency investment that leverages expertise across eleven agencies so to maximize returns, both financial and technical.
 
Proposed new areas of IT R&D focus on developing technologies for improved software designs and enhanced productivity in software development, and to better understand and respond to the socio-economic implications of the information technology revolution. Our current activities are expanded in high-end computing R&D and high-end computing infrastructure and applications, large scale networking (including the Next Generation Internet (NGI) initiative), human-computer interfaces and information management, ad high confidence software and systems. these activities will further our progress toward the goals for long-term, high-risk R&D identified in the 1999 report of the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee.

As we embark upon the 21st century, the Administration looks forward to working with Congress to continue investing in America's future and ensure its continued prosperity by furthering our commitment in information technology research and development.

Sincerely,



Neal Lane
Assistant to the President
for Science and Technology

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