That allows them to think about their actions. And reflect. On the meaning of their faith. In a way that is more consistent with peace and justice. Families and friends, coworkers, neighbors. They want to reach out. They want to help save their loved ones and friends and prevent them from taking a wrong turn. But communities dont always know the signs to look for or have the tools to intervene, or know what works best. That is where government can play a role if government is serving as a trusted partner. That is where we need to be honest. I know some Muslim Americans have concerns about working with government, particularly law enforcement. The reluctance is rooted in the objection to certain practices where Muslim Americans feel they may have been unfairly targeted. In our work, we have to make sure that abuses stop, are not repeated, we do not stigmatize entire communities. Nobody should be profiled or put under a cloud of suspicion because of their faith. [applause] engagement with communities cant be a cover for surveillance. You cant securitize our relationships with Muslim Americans dealing with them solely through the presence of law enforcement. When we do that only reinforces suspicions. It makes it harder for us to will trust we need to work together. Build the trust we need to work together. As part of this summit we are announcing we are to increase our outreach to communities including Muslim Americans. We are going to step up our efforts to engage with partners and raise awareness some more communities understand how to protect their loved ones from becoming radicalized. We have to devote more resources to the efforts. [applause] as government does more, communities are going to have to step up. We need to build on the pilot programs that have been discussed already in los angeles and minneapolis. These are partnership that bring people together in the spirit of Mutual Respect and create more dialogue, more trust and cooperation. If we are going to solve these issues, the people who are most targeted and most affected have to have a seat at the table where they can help shape and strengthen these partnerships. [applause] we are all working together to help communities state strong. Stay strong. Finally, we need to do what terrorists hope we will not do. Stay true to the values that define us as a diverse society. If extremists are peddling the notion that western countries are hostile to muslims, we need to show that we welcome people of all faiths. In america, islam has been woven into the fabric of our country since its founding. [applause] generations. Generations of immigrants came here and went to work as farmers and merchants and factory workers. And helped to lay railroads and build up america. The First Islamic Center in your new york city was founded in the 1890s. Americas first mosque was in interestingly north dakota. ,[laughter] Muslim Americans protect our communities with Police Officers and firefighters, and first responders, and protect our nation by serving in uniform. In homeland security. In cemeteries across our country, including arlington. Muslim american heroes rest in peace having given their lives in defense of all of us. [applause] of course that is the story extremists and terrorists dont want the world to know. Muslims succeeding and thriving in america. Because when that truth is known it exposes their propaganda as the lie that it is. It is a story every american must never forget. It reminds us all that hatred and bigotry and prejudice have no place in our country. It is not just counterproductive. It doesnt just aid terrorists. It is wrong. It is contrary to who we are. I am thinking of a little girl named sabrina who last month sent me a valentines day card. In the shape of a heart. It was the first valentine i got. [laughter] i got it from sabrina before melia and sasha. And michelle. [laughter] she is 11 years old in the fifth grade. She is a young muslim american. She said in her valentine, i enjoy being an american. She wants to be an engineer or basketball player. [laughter] which are good choices. She wrote, i am worried about people hating muslims. If some muslims do bad things that doesnt mean all of them do. She asked please tell everyone that we are good people and we are like everyone else. [applause] those are the words and the wisdom of a little girl growing up in america just like my daughters are going up here in america. We are just like everybody else. Everybody needs to remember that during the course of this debate. As we move forward with these challenges, we all have responsibilities. We all have hard work ahead of us on this issue. We cant paper we cant paper over problems. We are not one to solve this is if we are always trying to be politically correct. We do have to remember that 11yearold girl. That is our hope. That is our future. That is how we discredit violent ideologies by making sure her voice is lifted up. Making sure she is nurtured and she is supported. Then recognizing little girls and boys like that are all around the world. And us helping to address economic and political grievances that can be exploited, and empowering local communities, and staying true to our values with diverse and Tolerant Society even when we are threatened. Especially when we are threatened. There will be a military component to this. Savage cruelty is going on out that have to stop. Isil is killing muslims at a rate that is many multiples. Then the rate they are killing nonmuslims. Everybody has a stake in stopping them. There will be an element of us stopping them in their tracts in their tractsks with force. But to eliminate the soil out of which they grew, to make sure that we are giving a Brighter Future to everyone, and a lasting sense of security, we are going to have to make it clear to all of our children including that girl in fifth grade, that you have a place. You have a place here in america. You have a place in those countries where you live. You have a future. Ultimately, those are the antidotes to violent extremism. It will take time. This is a generational challenge. After 238 years that should be obvious, america has overcome bigger challenges. We will overcome the ones we face today. We will stay united and committed to the ideas that have shaped us for two centuries, including the opportunity and and justice and dignity of every single human being. Thank you very much. [applause] we will hear from president obama again tomorrow. It is a final day of a threeday summit held at the white house. You can see the president s comments life thursday at 2 30 a. M. Eastern here on cspan. Cspans three nights of tech continues now with a discussion of the use of digital sensors on every day off i like watches and sisters. A panel at the Churchill Club and santa fe debated how the expanding collection of data might be used to expand business opportunities, affecting the way people live. This is one hour. Welcome everyone. I am the chief economist for the Consumer Electronics association. How will known as the producers of a small middle little show called the international ces. We are almost 50 years in history. 2. 2 million square feet, hundred 70,000 friends. Im sure we will be talking about that today. This is my oprah moment. We have given you all a copy of my newest look, book published yesterday. Digital destiny. That future and implications are when everything becomes digital becomes connected, centralized. We see a world where that really starts to impact every experience we have. We will get into that as well. Larry, let me turn it over to you. Share. Thank you. Thank you to the Churchill Club. Congratulations on your book. I the privilege of reading it in manuscript. It will be a terrific success. I think it encapsulates a lot of the same kind of technologies that i have been looking at in the research i have been doing. That was the basis of our book last year. It is more of the same. We certainly talk about ces this year since the two of us were there. My feet still hurt. I think one of the big themes i want to look at, is what we think of as the Second Generation of this disruptive innovation. 20 years ago, when i first started writing about these trends, the industry that really affected immediately with the obvious ones. Consumer electronics, computing, communication, entertainment. The ones that were using those technologies all along. What we found in the research was that now mentoring a new stage where all of the other industries that werent affected , now it is their turn. A lot of interesting reasons we could talk about, why some industries are happening slower than others and some faster than others. All of the same kinds of being amazon, and napsterized. All of these industries that have had little impact last time. This presents an interesting set of opportunities for startups and investors, and other interested parties. Those are the technologies i think that you write about so well in the book, and we should hopefully talk about as many of them as we can. Robin . I lead our industry that serves our internet and social clients around the world. Ive been there for nearly two decades. One of the previous privileges is i get to work with exciting clients. As i chart my history at accenture, i have been working around digital disruption for a while. I was working with the music metered majors when napster hit them. And their response or lack thereof. Ive done a little work in the console gaming space, with the last three generations of consuls consoles. Unlike a smartphone that we thoroughly every couple of years, consoles have to ask for a longer. Of time. Period of time. Hey make them, launch them, and how they work is very different of from a lot of throwaway electronics we see today. We have worked with leading cloud providers since 2005. That is interesting from an intensity perspective. You are making decisions that are quite often decades ahead. Those are two decades investments that you are looking to the Digital Future and trying to guess where the world is heading. And then as you look at some of the other types of work around mobile and iat, much more software development. If you look at the results from ces, amazing developments over the past year. Just bring it full circle, i started my career with Ford Motor Company back in europe. I worked in the worked with for ford in 1995 with Virtual Reality using silicon graphics. 20 years along, it actually work s. Back in the day we could not achieve that. It is interesting looking at the fastpaced that we see that everything is changing really really fast. There are these long cycle developments around digital technologies. That actually underpin a lot of the change we see and structure we see right now. We look at the disruption as it is happening right now, and allow that disruption to occur are on actually occurring over a decade. Congratulations on your book. I have skimmed it. Ive only had a day to read it. Thank you. It is interesting that all three of us have talked about timing. That is something had talk about in the book as well. We tend to think of these eureka moments, where innovation is binary. But really it is broader evolutionary path that plays out over years or decades. That is definitely what we see about the trends we will talk about, connection sensitization. We start first with devices owned at high frequencies. Televisions were the first to become digitized. You take something that is widely owned and start there. We have now done through over the gone through all of these core devices we have. And we are starting to spill over into the adjacent secondorder effect. What do this start to look like . We can kind of go to the end of the story where everything is impacted. That is an easy jump. What is the sequence of events. From now until the end of digitization. As sort of a general rule, one of the things we found in our research about industry transformation is, there is a famous quote from ernest hemingway. How do you go bankrupt . The other one says, two ways gradually and then suddenly. That is it that the what we found in the industries we looked at. You see a long. Of gradual change, where incumbents say ok this new technology is Company Coming and may affect customers. But it is happening in an incremental and predictable way and we dont have to worry about it. Then one day, some event happens , or some Critical Mass is reached, someone gets the right combination of technology and Business Model, and they let it go and it is facebook. And all of a sudden all of the rules are changed. I think that is sort of the general trend we are seeing. As you talk about the book, the Price Performance and size are important of Sensor Technologies and computing stuff. It is Getting Better all the time. It now becomes costeffective to start introducing intelligence into more and more things. In my jiggly, from las vegas last week, takeaway, from las vegas last week, there was one overriding message. The theme song from the lego movie everything is awesome. Everything is connected. Everything you size connected to everything else. Everything you see is connected to everything else. The list of partners initially seemed completely bizarre. Car companies lock company, fit bit, what do those have to do it a thermostat . Oh, and a dryer. Now your dryer is talking to the thermostat. It is telling you that if you get in the car and you have left, if the cartels that did thermostat, the thermostat says no one is home and it will turn down the heat or turn off the air conditioning. If you are not home, then the dryer can know that they are not coming back, so slow down the cycle. 10 minutes before they arrive, turn it back on. Or when you put your key in the smart luck, lock, it can adjust the air temperature settings. These are the connections that say are initially bizarre bear. But then you say, that makes sense. All of these companies dont normally seem like people who would be partners are things that we go together. Once you get to that incredibly low price point and show dozens of senses into everything. Suddenly these connections become possible. And the idea of industry starts to fall away and you see these very strange patterns. I think one of the things that happen in technologies we have these eras were removed from a scarcity to a surplus. Highly think about the 60s and 70s were Computing Power was a scarcity. We used a very sparingly. Universities may or may not have had computer access. They might have been there might have been a mainframe that people could queue up for. Then around 1984, it kind of becomes in abundance and we start to waste it. Apple introduces the macintosh the first computer to use a graphical interface. Prior to that we would have never wasted computer power on rendering a graphical user interface. It was an essentially redundant feature. If you wanted to control a computer you would command window. A computer in 81 had not been successful and it was expensive because you had to pay a premium. I feel like sensors are there today where it has gone from scarcity to a surplus and we start to waste it. When we do, it creates these new opportunities for these new marketplaces. I think about image sensors on phones. Please tell include one image sensor. And we started to include second ones and now there are multiple ones. It changes our behavior. It introduces the selfie. We can argue whether that is a good thing or a bad thing. The word of the year. Right. That is empowering because we have multiple sensors on the front of the device. If you are in an industry, you need to think about what are the deployment of senses going to do to the experience . That is an example of gradual and then sudden. One of the things driving the sensitization of everything thats sensors asian of everything is that smart phone. But that has done is created a secondary market for all the parts that go with smartphones. If you take a commercial drown, 3d printer, if you take them apart, you find that most of the pieces are smartphone pieces. Often they are last generation smartphone pieces that you can buy cheap, because they have been made in such incredible volume. They are being made and such incredible volume just for the Smartphone Market that has spilled over into other industries. Suddenly what might have been years away from being Cost Effective is happening overnight. I would say if you look at the course of technologies, i like to think it in terms of the device level or the sensor level. He think of the network and conductivity. Arguably conductivity is not moving as fast as we are seeing with devices. Then you have the clout that is just unlocking incredible creativity. Im struck by adept technology level, at eight technology level, but other things, with the reason were seeing an explosion of creativity is not only the technology but also the fact that there are open ecosystems for development. If you are a startup today, you cannot conceivably go into the hardware space. You can work with a variety of different players. You can actually get into the hardware space, and you can stand on the shoulders of giants. The other thing is if you look at the smartphone and the financial power of the user. With android and ios, that is one billion customer accounts. One billion paying customers. You can access that. That is unique. That is something that has happened over the last year. Back to your world a continual rise in Consumer Electronics. What is fascinating is not only are we spending more and more in Consumer Electronics at the expense of other categories, but products like the tv is costing less. You kind of get headroom opening up. That kind of fueling of spend in these new categories is phenomenal. It comes to the point where you say, how many units will the apple watch be sold . There is such a huge amount of spend opening up. I totally agree. I think we are in an amazing time of creativity in the digital space. It is almost this moment where we are seeing proliferation of so many different products as evidenced by ces. It is interesting to see which will survive which ecosystems will survive. How will they interact a very good question. Which ser