Opinion editor's note: On Jan. 4, the author was named the new commissioner of the state Department of Employment and Economic Development. Steve Grove had submitted the essay that follows in early November.
When people think about the top technology hubs in America today, Silicon Valley comes immediately to mind, followed perhaps by New York or Boston. Indeed, a stunning 75 percent of today's venture capital money goes to tech startups in those three cities.
What fewer people know is that Minnesota once was home to one of the largest and most dynamic technology ecosystems in America.
It was here that the first distinctive computer industry in the United States formed, anchored by firms like Control Data Corp. and Honeywell. Minnesota tech companies gave the world innovations like the supercomputer, the pacemaker and the black box flight-data recorder.
The University of Minnesota's "Internet Gopher" was hosting more of the internet than the World Wide Web in the early days; its visionary founder, Mark McCahill, even coined the phrase "surfing the internet."
As Thomas Misa chronicles in his excellent history of the Minnesota technology economy, "Digital State," this high-tech boom in the middle of the 20th century helped pull the state from the bottom half of national wages to the top half, creating 68,000 jobs by 1989.
Combined with progressive public policies in education and taxation, our tech heyday was a key ingredient in the famous "Minnesota Miracle" that put our state at the forefront of economic development — and landed DFL Gov. Wendell Anderson on the cover of Time magazine in 1973 touting "The good life in Minnesota."
So what does our state's technology industry look like today? Clearly, we are no Silicon Valley, though we do have our strengths: a medical tech sector that boasts over 15,000 health businesses (including six Fortune 500 health technology companies) and a strong agriculture tech market, with five of the world's 30 largest food and ag companies based here. But Minnesota no longer enjoys the top billing we had in the mid 20th century as a dominant tech hub.