- The Secretary of Technology requires more investment in the United Kingdom of technological giants
- Peter Kyle has been the potential of the United Kingdom companies
- Kyle returns to those who criticize their meeting with technology signatures, since that is their job
The Secretary of Technology of the United Kingdom has asked global technological giants to continue bringing their latest innovations and more investment to the country.
Speaking at the London event of the Google Cloud Summit, Peter Kyle declared: “My message for large technology companies is clear: bring their best ideas, your best technology at the best price and you will get access to the largest customer in the country.”
“In return, you will get access to the largest customer in the country, one that will be increasingly intelligent and more digital.”
Goodbye “Ball and Chain” Technology
Kyle also attacked those who criticized their meetings with technology firms, pointing out: “That is my job.”
He mentioned a report by The Guardian who said he had 28 meetings with people in or near the technological sector in his six months on paper, including main companies such as Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Meta – 70% more than their predecessor.
“Yes, I have met technology companies,” he said. “This is how it offers value for the public. This is how you unlock innovation.”
Kyle spoke when the United Kingdom government announced a new association with Google Cloud that aims to help drag the first of the dependence of “ball and chain” technology.
He pointed out that more than one in four technological systems of the public sector will be executed in inherited technology, a figure that increases to 70% in some police and trust forces of the NHS, sometimes in contracts signed decades ago.
In general, the association could see Google invest hundreds of millions of pounds in the public sector technology of Great Britain, Kyle said, “helping to deliver my ambition to bring the public services that people use every day, drag it to the 21st century.”
The measure would also help reduce the taxpayer’s burden, which often has to pay the invoice for the stimmed £ 21 billion spent on buying the same technology over and over again due to obsolete and blocked contracts.
Kyle referred to several other significant recent ads, including the recently launched GOV.UK application, as well as the National Digital Marketplace, a new acquisition platform for the public sector.
“Great Britain will use technology in more areas and more than ever before,” he said, “we know that the tools that use the same technology are capable of transforming Whitehall itself, the NHS and other essential services in which millions of people in our country trust (Y) with more practical support, I cannot wait to see that our two teams join.”