The keynote on the second day was delivered by Bill Clinton, the 42nd president of the United States. He spoke about how innovation by a few sharp minds can be scaled up to bring prosperity in developing countries. He used props, statistics, and his personal experience in countries, most recently in Haiti. Here are a few notes about his speech and general observations about IIT:
- In the middle of his speech he got a call on his cell. He took the call since he said that only Hillary had that number, and told her that he was in the middle of his speech to IIT. He then asked her “Yes or no?” and hung up after that
- I met a recent graduate from IIT (Chemical Eng – 2009 batch) doing his masters at MIT. He was just one of 15 from his batch of 500 to come to the US. During my time it was not uncommon to have 10 times that many come abroad.
- The team that was a runners up to us called ECPS were a group of recent graduates. At a time when most people their age would be looking for their first job, one of them is already running a company with 10 people, they have several clients, and they were able to raise sponsorship money for 3 of their team members to come to Chicago.

Bill Clinton addressing PanIIT
More information can be found at Pradeep’s blog and Christopher’s blog.
It is good to see some real work being done in the area of innovation and entrepreneurship in developing countries. And others that are further along and opening their borders to innovation.
#1 by Christopher S. Rollyson on October 13, 2009 - 11:16 am
Thank you for bringing up the H1B issue. One of the biggest problems the USA faces right now is that neither legislators nor voters understand the trade-offs of living in a global economy; they don’t understand that having very smart people doing exciting things are the “shop floor” of the Knowledge Economy, and having as many in the “States as possible CREATES jobs. If Americans complain, let them work as hard as others; no one is owed anything and deserves nothing except what s/he produces of merit.
Re: the “phone call,” I thought it was a bit cheesy and definitely staged to get Hillary’s name in front of IIT grads. How did it come across to you?
#2 by Christopher S. Rollyson on October 13, 2009 - 11:17 am
BTW, you can see my coverage here: http://bit.ly/paniitbc09
#3 by pamela on October 13, 2009 - 8:03 pm
Good comment. Especially because it is a competitive market for tech talent. See http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/10/10/chile-wants-your-poor-your-huddled-masses-your-tech-entrepreneurs/trackback/
I also like your blog and your reading list.
Pamela
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