Technology

Trump inauguration’s invisible infrastructure is future of tech

Many time-honored rituals of the peaceful transfer of power were carried out on the U.S. Capitol steps this Friday. But one of them attracted nary a second glance from the news cameras and selfie sticks, although it is essential to the experience of virtually every supporter, protestor and onlooker who gathered in the nation’s capital to witness the inauguration of our 45th president.

In anticipation of the one million visitors who were expected in DC for the inauguration, leading U.S. wireless companies invested millions in state-of-the-art mobile infrastructure in and around the U.S. Capitol and National Mall to increase network capacity on the big day up to 500 percent.

{mosads}Many of these upgrades are permanent and will remain as lasting contributors to the district’s wireless infrastructure — and a compelling “sneak preview” of network enhancements planned for other parts of the country throughout the year.  

 

Further supplementing these efforts are numerous cells-on-wheels (affectionately known as COWs) that provide a temporary capacity boost for large-scale events.

Friday’s COWs are six times more powerful than those used when President Obama last took the oath of office in 2013.  It’s an essential technological leap when you consider the all-out race wireless companies are engaged in to ensure U.S. mobile infrastructure keeps pace with the fast-escalating demands of American consumers.

Consider these facts from eight short years ago:

So just as our nation witnessed a peaceful transfer of executive power, so did we, and will continue to, enjoy the rapid transfer of our data as we share our experiences with friends, family, constituents and the world.

Now that the oath is taken and the weekend’s pomp and circumstance draws to a close, the real work begins — in the halls of Congress, at the White House, the FCC and beyond — to ensure in the years to come we have a similarly strong story to tell about the strength of U.S. wireless infrastructure, the robust private sector investment powering it forward and the extraordinary innovation and economic opportunity it is making possible throughout our democracy.

Nydia Gutierrez is executive director of Mobile Future, an association of cutting-edge technology and communications companies dedicated to educating the public on the broad range of wireless innovations transforming our society.


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