Health care and education, in my view, are next up for fundamental software-based transformation.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Healthcare is becoming part of information technology.
One of the biggest challenges to medicine is the incorporation of information technology in our practices.
Health care missed the PC and Internet revolutions, but it can't afford to miss the cloud and mobile revolution.
Education should not be about building more schools and maintaining a system that dates back to the Industrial Revolution. We can achieve so much more, at unmatched scale with software and interactive learning.
I also rise today in strong support of forward movement on the implementation of health information technology, which has the potential to save the United States billions of dollars in health care costs each year.
We're a high-volume, low-margin business, so we decided to reinvent our own approach to health care.
Software substitution, whether it's for drivers or waiters or nurses - it's progressing. Technology over time will reduce demand for jobs, particularly at the lower end of skill set.
The real cure for what ails our health care system today is less government and more freedom.
Part of me thinks that innovation, real innovation in health care delivery, needs to happen from the bottom to the top.
What we're really trying to do is level out the health care system. It has gotten so one-sided as more and more people have been put into managed care; in fact, about 70 percent of the patients in the country.
No opposing quotes found.