Host chaitanya chet kanojia, what are you showing people here . Its a new company. Its about bringing a competitive altern aive to wired broadband to the u. S. And globally we think there is a really great big opportunity to do that. What is the Technology Behind that . Its not just starry thats doing this but really the next frontier in wireless communication is this. You are look at 10, 15 times the frequency of cellular operations and the big advantage is it gives you a tremendous amount of bandwidth, you can pump many times more data. One of the first uses of that that makes sense is in wireless broadband. Were looking at what are the opportunities in using it. These things have other limitations as well. For example, they dont go as far as other signals do. They dont penetrate buildings. They have a difficulty of operating at these frequencies but if you can figure out the way around those things, its a lot of fun. Have you figured out a way around them . We think so. Okay. Can you gives us just a thumbnail of what this technology does or what you put it in. The basic idea is that we have built whats known as an tive active phaser, historically its been used to send very High Frequency signals over long distances and back. Were basically using 9 same strategy for communication technology, which is very novel and knew. As new. A lot of uses looking at these things because you you go off the power underradar be under the radar becomes expensive. We got inspiration from radar and applied to communication. That is one thing. And in particular, wifi is a really Exciting Technology because there is a lot of innovation happening in wifi at state radio levels. We adopted a lot of those approaches and adopted a system allowing us come to overcome them. Wifi is almost an Old Technology today, isnt it . It is so advanced that a lot of innovations that happened and now the new standards to be worked on are by far the best. The beauty is the consumer grid technology. These are offsprings of those technologies and they are incredible. But you can Guess Congress has spent billions to develop this rad radio. The next innovations in wifi and 5g are all coming together for a common approach to look at what is the next big thing. When do you see 5g being the norm . Well, 5g is an interesting feat because the whole idea of the very low license but high distrubutted in industrial mi mindset. On the third side it has the use of millimeter weight. I think it is going to be in theing to see. The conventional wisdom is the standards being developed by 2020 and after that i think you are looking at silicone development and i think it is not that far away. We think within ten years. Lte is going to be ten years old soon, in another four or five years and you will see the next wave of innovation after that. All right. This is the your box. What is in this box . This is about 20 inches tall and it is a powerful device. You can put it on building tops, roof tops, housing, towers or whatever you chose. The signal is sent to devices like these which are mounted on buildings which can be used or singlefamily homes like an antenna. This device allows you to carry the powerful signal inside your home. Does this technology in any way relate to your technology that you developed for area . That was a challenge talking about millimeter weights and nothing is related. You remember aero, the Supreme Court case, is there could this be enough of a disrupter to take to the Supreme Court case . No, this is there is no question of law involved. Chaitanya chet kanojia founder of starry. And what are we looking here . This is nividia automotive super computer to enable cars to drive themselves. We plug in the camera, radar, laser scanner, and essentially we are Building Three dimensional models of everything going on. We are showing our vehicle. It has cameras and laser scanners added to it. The data comes in and shows how that data appears within the brain of the system. We are building a full three dimensional model of what the car can see. Totaling that with laser and camera information. You can use Artificial Intelligence and we would never display this to the driver but this is what we used in the Development Environment to sense everything that is going on around the car. If we go back one slide, we can show you how we are able to detect all of the different types of objects. What is a car, a truck, we can identify people and bicycles and this massive amounts of information coming in at once is usually overwhelming to drivers. We can do this at 360 degrees around the car and understand where the car can drive, this is showing how it appears to the driver. Here is the windshield at the top. In the instrument session we can show what is coming up behind the car before entering the field of view. This is the rearview view . This is actually your instrument thruster. As you are driving you can see cars coming up in your blind spot before they even pass you. This is giving you the confidence the selfdriving car understands what is happening around it and indicate the path. We have heard about googles selfdriving cars and other large companies, how is Good Technology different than this . We are working with 80 different car companies. Internet companies as well are using our car computer and building their abstract cars with this technology. We are not developing the car. But we develop the Software Going into it. [inaudible conversation] a lot of Processing Power in this business. If we went back in time ten years to do this level of performance, 24 trillion operations, it would require a specific computer that would fill up this entire room. This system is designed for an automotive application. You can notice the input here from the radar, ultra sonic, and all of those censors you are on the car are processing that information and they could build a map of where the car goes. Is this an after the mact product anyone can add to their car . That is something we are developing closely with the automakers. This seems to be a product that will have regulations. That is what we are doing; developing this product with automakers. What we want is Government Entities to make sure there is uniform legislation. Not state by state but at the federal level to make sure the vehicles are all the same. That is why you are up here on capitol hill. We already have a lot of programs going on in other countries and we would love to see the same level of implemented here. So what has been the reaction when you show this . People love it. The reality is so many people are injured or killed in traffic accidents every day. This technology has the ability to dramatically reduce the number of accidents. The technology is coming fast and we want to be available for the market. How long has this technology been worked on . What is your background . I have been working in automotive for a decade. Our technology is used to design cars nividia creates stimulator to figure out to help car crashes like wind tunnels. Using virtual retality is something we do now we are taking all of the power and bringing it into the cars to make them drive safer. And you are working with nividia. Are you the ceo . My title is the senior director of the automotive unit. It is a small part of nividia but the Fastest Growing part that is bringing this technology to the auto industry. We have over ten million cars on the road today with our technology inside. We are using it for entertainment strongs like in audis and hondas. We have been talking on the commu the communicators, with Danny Shapiro from nividia. 1776. Yes, sir. What is it in it a global start up incubater based here in washington, d. C. , San Francisco and another city. We are focused on world startups like education and energy and health care and these are companies that are hitting all areas of the company and our focus is help them get the right connection whether it is extra capital, mentorship, media attention. Are you a funder . We provide a whole mix of Self Services for the startups. We work with a number of great institutions that invest in the startups. If somebody had an idea, say google and 1776 would pop up . Is that how it works . We are unique in the sense we focus on highly regulated sectors. These are companies that are disrupting government in some sort of fashion. You have startups all over the world we are working with. Not only in washington, d. C. But all over the global. We run stories to identify the promising startups. We travel around the world to find the best companies from africa to israel and to silicone valley. We brought two companies here today. Lets meet a couple of them. This is Kathleen Hale with rebel desk. What is rebel desk . We sell treadmill desks so you can be more active while working. And how is this disrupting technology . All people have been doing since the Industrial Revolution is sitting in chairs in their office. Toj is part of the problem, right . With the arrival of computers and televisions in homes and communine commuting time. We used to have the phrase sit down and take a load off because you were running around all day. Now we have to build in time for exercise because all we do is sit. We are disrupting the Way Technology has caused us to be inactive. Lets build activity in their work day. Is rebel desk on the market . Yes, it is a product for sale at our own website. We sell the individual treadmill itself and the desk that goes up and down. You can make it the perfect height for you while you walk. We sell the products together or separately. It is designed just for walking. It doesnt go matter than two miles per hour. Very safe. You can walk in your work clothes without working up a sweat or needing to change into a gym out fit. What is the benefit . You probably used it. How many miles can you walk a day . I walk four to five miles going at what is considered a leisurely pace. We have customers doing as many as eight and nine miles a day on the treadmill. You can use it however you like. Stand a little. Walk a little. If you need to the desk knows the sitting tight and you can sit down and take a break. Kathleen hale with revel desk. Brandon pollak, what else . This is Dennis Weppner with crossdeck. What is that . It is geared toward the department of defense mainly. What does it due . Right now we are aiming to take a lot of the navys Current System and make it digitally. Tomorrow morning hundreds of thousands of sailors will start the day by printing out their schedule. We solve the problem by keeping it in the pocket but allow it to be updated as the ever changing needs arise. So another feature we have is personal qualification system. A lot of the training is peer to peer. We might have qualifications you need and i might have ones you need. In order to get qualified we train each other. The navy carries around three inch binders with hundreds of papers and signatures. That is how they get qualified. There is no way to decipher unless i hand you the binder and you hand the binder back to me. That allows you to sign digitally and we can track in real time and make sure on marine core units and what have you people are qualified in the place they need to be qualified. So the idea came from our three founders. They are service war officers and met each other at the naval academy. They all saw this need as they served on the naval base. I came on in september. I am a marine core assistant. I saw the same need in the marine core. Dennis weppner of cross desk and these are a couple companies 1776 have put on the board. Now joining us is democratic congressman bobby rush. Congressman rush, why are you down here at the Technology Display . Technology is one of my interests. I have a concentration on technology and sit on the subcommittee of technology and internet. So i am always amazed at American Innovation and things that can help us save money and also help us to make our life easier. I am really excited about the displ displays that have to do with homes in terms of heating and sprink sprinkling system and how they can be controlled and administered by your cellphone. That is my favorite. It is an amazing feat. I am so excited and i cannot wait to get back to my best buy store so i can invest more money in best buy for this technology. Host you are here more on a personal level than congressional . Look, i am a consumer. We are all consumers first and foremost. We are members of congress secondly. I am excited about the advancements in the technology. The advancement in telecommuneations with all of the start phones and allied instruments all really making the american peoples lives a lot simpler and easier. One thing that amazes me, when i have an app and you can change the color of the lights by moving your finger around, it reminded me of the disco. I am old school. I had a lot of fun playing with that. But i am glad that we consumers are excited and this is brought too hill. We dont have a chance to visit everybody so this is a nice way to get a handson opportunity to play with the toys and test the instruments. You said you are a consumer first and then a politician. Is there Anything Congress can to do help with maybe regulations . I dont want to mention regulations right now. I do believe we need another you know, we havent had a Technology Bill since 1996. It is about time you can imagine what the world was like in 1996 when the telecommunication act came out. We need to make sure week we can control the information and there is a level Playing Field and that we are able to work with our american enemies. And we have the best we can give them in terms of keeping regulations away from them and this whole innovative, Technological Advancement center from a different perspective. I was on the committee that wrote the 1996 telecommunication act. I know it is old and obsolete. We need to bring it up to date to really be of service. Those are things i think about. We have been talking on the communicators with the former and current congressman bobby rush. Now joining us is tom simon from a Company Called surf 3. We are enabling commerce with the development of data and b t databases and structure in the right way. If you were talking to congress and you said that would they understand what you were saying . No. What i would say is we are trying to help bring together licenses that creators can make that can be tied back for right management. So licensing in itself is a really hard proctor and challenging. We are making it scalable for them to monetize on the marketing and creative side. This is whoever created this, this is their intellectual property; right . This this is the intellectual property withstanding copyright. They have a potential for the item instead of having to worry about somebody taking it down. So they do that. It is easier them and the creators. When you talk about the recognition what does that mean . Where you can run products through recognition and transfer series of datapoints back. We created a trademark database with a license saying you have to apply for a license. So it provides the feedback information so that the creator or marketplace knows what they can or cant do with that particular object and what steps they can take to make it monetized. Where did the concept come from . Some of our founders started a company right flow back in the early 2000s and sold that to google and that helped drive hulu. You could put up content and create a monetize event for users. So in a lot of ways it was the creator with a hands on base. Applying similar principles but a more difficult workflow. Source3 is the name of the company and it is new yorkbased. You have been watching the communicators looking at new technology at ces on the hill in washington. If you would like to see some of our previous programs, go to cspan. Org. Washington journal is live every day. Progressive Campaign Founder adam green discusses issues to progressives and the role they play in 2016 headed into the general election. And he will talk about voters attitude to hillary clinton. And hot air Senior Editor and going red author joins us to talk about how conservatives view donald trump. Be sure to watch cspans washington journal. Tonight, it is booktv in prime time on cspan2 with books on energy policy. First, Wenonah Hauter book on what she sees as the dangers of fracting followed by steven moore and Kathleen White whose book dealing freedom makes the case for using fossil fuels as an energy resource. And later a look at the Energy Crisis that occurred in the 1970s. Meg jacobs writes about it in panic at the pump after tonights talk we will have time for questions from the audience after which we will have a book signing right here