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Native American tribe takes connectivity into its own hands.
December 27, 2023

Tech Brew

Dell for Startups

It’s Wednesday. A third of the Americans who live in rural areas or on tribal lands lack high-speed internet access. Tech Brew’s Kelcee Griffis investigates how reliable cellular service came to the Cherokee community of Kenwood, Oklahoma.

In today’s edition:

Kelcee Griffis, Maia Anderson, Annie Saunders

CONNECTIVITY

Native networks

People attend a mobile tower ribbon-cutting in Kenwood, Oklahoma. AT&T

Erlinda Soap enrolled in college classes at Northeastern State University without a laptop or home internet service. When she couldn’t borrow a relative’s laptop or tablet and internet connection—which was often—she used her cell phone to write and submit assignments.

The system wasn’t perfect. Soap, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation whose tribal name is Dagasi, almost gave up on her sociology degree because of frustration with her mobile service after Covid-19 lockdowns caused the campus to close.

“I was very nearly close to withdrawing from my classes, because the university was closed,” she told Tech Brew. “I’m living in a rural area with limited service. My work—it was a hit and miss. Maybe it might get submitted. Or maybe it just might totally shut down on me at the very last minute…It was really challenging.”

Now, a new AT&T-supported cell tower in the Cherokee community of Kenwood, Oklahoma, has made mobile connections more stable for locals like Soap. Her experience highlights the connectivity challenges many Native Americans face when living on or near tribal lands.

Vice President Kamala Harris noted in Dec. 6 remarks that “one in three Americans who live on tribal lands and in rural areas do not have access to high-speed internet.” A number of federal efforts currently seek to close that gap, including funds from the American Rescue Plan and federal grants dedicated specifically to improving connectivity on tribal lands.

Keep reading here.—KG

     

PRESENTED BY DELL FOR STARTUPS

Start it up

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Move on up.

AI

Algorithms for better outcomes

aerial shot of newyork-presbyterian NewYork–Presbyterian

The new year is approaching, and that means everyone is writing out their 2024 goals and priorities—including health systems.

NewYork–Presbyterian, one of the largest health systems in New York, has prioritized implementing its AI strategy in 2024, Peter Fleischut, group SVP and chief transformation and information officer at the health system, told Healthcare Brew.

At the core of the health system’s AI strategy is streamlining workflows to make it easier for providers to care for patients, Fleischut said.

“It is important for us to make sure that we don’t just implement technology for technology’s sake,” Fleischut said. “A big part of our role is to really understand the business, understand how we’re trying to take care of patients, and make sure we’re applying technology where technology should be applied.”

Keep reading here.—MA

     

READER SPOTLIGHT

Coworking with Rian Buckley Goodwin

Graphic featuring a headshot of Rian Buckley Goodwin Rian Buckley Goodwin

Coworking is a weekly segment where we spotlight Tech Brew readers who work with emerging technologies. Click here if you’d like a chance to be featured.

How would you describe your job to someone who doesn’t work in tech?

Anytime you interact with a company online or within an app, you are using a product a digital team built. Everything—from the buttons you click and the pages you see to how you pay for things and your end-to-end experience—was carefully thought through to make it the most pleasing customer experience possible.

My job is to think of all the things a customer needs to be successful and then build, launch, and iterate on that product based on what we learn from our customers. Product is the bridge between business and technology, and what we do directly impacts our customer, so it’s a very rewarding space to be in.

What’s the most compelling tech project you’ve worked on, and why?

We launched Frontdoor in the spring of 2023, and the ability to instantly video chat with an experienced and vetted home repair expert is paramount to our product. It’s like Uber for all your home repair needs—open the app, chat with an expert about your issue, and fix it while on the call with them; or, if that’s not possible, we will refer you to a vetted pro to perform the necessary repairs. I believe this instant connection to an industry that has been notoriously hard to work with is a game-changer, and look forward to enabling all homeowners to get handy and check things off their to-do list.

Keep reading here.

     

SPONSORED BY PLURALSIGHT

Pluralsight

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BITS AND BYTES

Stat: 55%. That’s the percentage of failed EV charging attempts that are attributed to “station-connectivity” problems, Canary Media reported, citing a Qmerit analysis of EV Connect data.

Quote: “It’s a period of massive uncertainty for Google, where they’re not sure what their business practices are going to look like in two or three years.”—Sam Weinstein, a professor at the Cardozo School of Law and a former Justice Department lawyer, to the New York Times in a story about what Google’s loss in the Epic Games antitrust case could mean for the tech giant in 2024

Read: One year in, ChatGPT’s legacy is clear (The Atlantic)

Scalin’ success: Every founder needs an extra hand at some point. Let Dell for Startups help you grow your biz with their startup tech advisor, exclusive pricing, and mentorship opps. Get started.*

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