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OCR for page 180
Page 180
B
Briefers to the Committee
July 29, 1996
Kevin Mills, Program Manager, Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency
Eugene Famolari, Associate Director, Army
Communications-Electronics Command (CECOM)
Paul Sass, Special Projects Office, CECOM
Jim Freebersyser, Army Research Office
John Graniero, Chief Scientist for C3, Air Force Rome
Laboratory
October 15, 1996
Rob Ruth, Program Manager, Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency
Marlan Kvigne, Chief Engineer,
Communications and Information Systems Department, NCCOSC (RDTE
Division)
Joe Macker, Network Research Scientist,
Center for High Assurance Computer Systems, Naval Research
Laboratory
David Wye, Technical Advisor, Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, Federal Communications Commission
December 10, 1996
Lou Dellaverson, Manager, Wireless ATM Laboratory, Motorola
OCR for page 181
Page 181
Nicolas Kauser, Chief Technology Officer,
AT&T Wireless Services
William Osborn, Manager of Technology
Development, Cellular Phone Research and Development Center,
Ericsson, Inc.
Joseph A. Tarallo, Director, Wireless Base
Station and Radio Technology Department, Lucent Technologies
D. Raychaudhuri, NEC America (via
telephone)
At the December 1996 session, invited
speakers from industry were asked to address these questions, among
others:
1.
What technologies will the consumer wireless industry likely
develop over the next 5 to 15 years, regardless of whether the
federal government provides basic R&D?
2.
Are there any critical telecommunications technologies that must
be funded/developed by the U.S. government because commercial
industry cannot justify the risk or exploratory expense?
3.
What are the most critical technical and nontenchnical issues
facing the wireless industry that threaten the competitiveness or
growth of individual companies on a global scale?
4.
What is the potential for synergy between military needs and
likely commercial development? What technology gaps will the
military need to fill in order to use commercial products and
services?
5.
Which countries are leading in wireless communications, in terms
of deployment of technologies? What are examples of good policies
that help to foster good technological development in these
countries? Who will be the future leaders, and why?
6.
How does industry benefit from wireless research done in
academic institutions, universities, and research centers? What are
some examples?
7.
Given that the military may have to operate globally in
developed and underdeveloped regions, what could be viable wireless
technologies to support military mobile missions?
In addition to the guests invited to participate on the panel,
there were seven observers from the Federal Communications
Commission: David Wye, Ron Netro, Marty Liebman, Mike Marcus, Larry
Petak, Steve Sharkey, and Tom Stanley.
Representative terms from entire chapter:
wireless industry