Those events are but the latest examples of an essential truism
Those events are but the latest examples of an essential truism: If America is to secure its future, it must control its own technological destiny. This means that it no longer can outsource its technological development to countries that increasingly appear to be adversaries. Instead, it must rebuild its domestic innovation and production base.
While Silicon Valley and Boston remain the envy of the global technology world, America is also fortunate that this need for a national response has come to the fore just as technological centers in what Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger calls the “Silicon Heartland” are reaching prominence. Gelsinger’s firm recently put this concept to work by investing $20 billion in a chip manufacturing facility in Columbus, Ohio.
Another town emerging as a potential technology hub is Syracuse, N.Y., where Boise, Idaho-based Micron has announced a $100 billion investment in a mega-chip facility — the largest single investment in the state’s history. JMA Wireless, a company that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called the “Antidote to Huawei,” last year opened the only U.S.-owned 5G manufacturing campus in the country, also near Syracuse.
Some smaller centers are seeing tech growth as well. For example, Submittable, a Missoula, Mont.-based software company, recently raised $47 million in Series C Funding and now has 90 employees in town.
Traditional industrial centers such as Detroit and Chicago are also benefiting from the spread of tech centers around the country. The Detroit-based automakers are investing billions of dollars in new technologies that will guide the path to electric vehicles, and Chicago pulled in $7 billion in venture capital funding last year.
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