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Wireless to drive Internet growth, tech leaders say

By Reuters
Johannesburg, 16 Nov 2004

Wireless services will lead the next growth phase of the Internet as venture capitalists who helped fund the early boom open their wallets again, industry leaders said yesterday.

"I think the Internet`s largest opportunities are in bringing new services, ones that we barely imagine, to billions of people around the world, wirelessly," said John Doerr, one of Silicon Valley`s most renowned venture capitalists and a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

"We are probably in the early...adolescence of this Internet world."

Doerr spoke at a roundtable discussion of the TechNet Innovation Summit at the Mountain View, California, headquarters of search company Google. TechNet is a bipartisan political network of about 400 CEOs that promotes technology.

One focus of the discussion was new ways to use wireless technology to expand the Web. WiFi, the popular term for wireless high-speed Internet access over short distances, is gaining traction and other wireless technologies are in the works.

"The interesting thing about wireless is what it can do to bring the rest of the world into the Web," Intel president and COO Paul Otellini said. "You can start to think about bringing this into rural markets."

Twin growth engines

Chief executives John Chambers of Cisco Systems, Eric Schmidt of Google and Terry Semel of Yahoo also pointed to WiFi and high-speed, or broadband, Internet access as twin engines of growth for their companies and the industry.

"There are many ways in which devices are going to be connected," said Bill Joy, former chief scientist and a co-founder of high-end computer maker Sun Microsystems. "The thing we probably have not paid enough attention to is there are going to be many kinds of Webs," he said.

In addition to the familiar World Wide Web, Joy said he envisioned sub-sections of the Internet providing a personal Web, an information Web and an entertainment Web, among others.

Doerr said his company has in the last year-and-a-half invested in about half a dozen companies focused on delivering wireless services.

After the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, venture capital funding all but dried up. But Doerr said investors were ready to spend again, if not at peak levels.

"We have returned to pre-1999 funding and valuation levels for new ventures," Doerr said. "It went up by a factor of four through the end of the boom" from the pre-1999 levels, he added.

Otellini and other executives said the US lagged many nations in rolling out broadband and WiFi.

While funding of new ventures and innovation continues in the US, the world`s largest economy is falling behind in turning out hi-tech workers with science and engineering degrees, panellists said.

"We are not generating the engineering talent that we need," Joy said.

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