Charles Wright's Bleeding Edge blog raises the issue about Australia's failure in communications policy, specifically in the area of broadband access.
While I agree that Australians are being ripped off by a government that understands little and cares even less about IT or communications broadband, it is only one part of a much bigger picture where we are being let down by the people we vote to be our leaders.
There's very little point in having super fast broadband if our industries don't need it. Graeme Phillipson keeps pointing out that our governments just don't want to buy Australian technology preferring to buy foreign than to support local developers. The situation is probably no different in the corridors of big business.
An even bigger problem is education. Even if we had a vigorous IT industry with super-fast broadband, it would be starved of skilled workers. We're just not offering our kids the education to compete in the high-tech world.
Of course if we did educate our kids, it would make no difference anyway. A school leaver choosing a career in science either has to immigrate or take a vow of poverty. It's much more lucrative to become a builder, property developer or commercial lawyer.
It seems to me Australians made a decision some ten or fifteen years ago: We'd rather not compete. It's much easier to be the lucky country riding on the back of wool, wheat, bauxite, iron ore, uranium, gold or whatever commodity is booming this year. Creating new and innovative technologies is something other people can do.
Charles is right in decrying the lousy state of broadband in Australia, but I can't help think the great Senator Alston was right, all we'd do with real broadband is download porn and pirated music.
Monday, April 10, 2006
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