WashingTECH Tech Converge 2020 and the Human Side of Innovation
Technology interests me most when it gets personal. I do not only want to know what a tool can do. I want to know who it serves, who it leaves out, and how it changes the way people live.
That is what brought me to WashingTECH Tech Converge 2020 in New York University Washington, DC. Even before the program began, I was thinking about how this experience fit into the larger stories I keep returning to on DG Speaks.
Washington Talks Tech Differently
WashingTECH Tech Converge 2020 opened a conversation around tech policy, innovation, digital equity, Washington's tech ecosystem. The event had the energy of the future, but the best questions were still deeply human.
Digital Equity Is Not a Side Issue
What I appreciated most was the way the event created room for connection. Whether people came to learn, network, taste, listen, watch, or simply be present, the gathering offered a reminder that shared spaces still matter.
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Policy Needs Real People in the Room
The event also reminded me that the best stories rarely sit on the surface. They live in the side conversations, the details, the questions people ask, and the small moments that make a room feel alive.
The Question That Followed Me Home
I came away with curiosity, but also with questions that deserved more time. Innovation is exciting, but it becomes meaningful when it helps people live with more access, dignity, and possibility.
