LETTERS FROM AMERICA

KATE NOVAK | From Stockholm, Paris, and Washington, D.C. - turning a footprint into a Swedish legacy

43 min · 23 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio KATE NOVAK | From Stockholm, Paris, and Washington, D.C. - turning a footprint into a Swedish legacy

Descripción

There's a building at 2900 K Street, Northwest, in Washington, DC, overlooking the Potomac River. It's designed by Swedish architects and built from materials reflecting Swedish roots and traditions, and in 2006, it was inaugurated by the King and Queen of Sweden as the home for the Embassy of Sweden - making it the official Swedish footprint in the United States. It is known as the "House of Sweden" - and it all started with Swedish-born Kate Novak.

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Portada del episodio PETER BORSOS | From a world of phones to an invisible infrastructure - the Swedish footprint of Ericsson stretches 150 years

PETER BORSOS | From a world of phones to an invisible infrastructure - the Swedish footprint of Ericsson stretches 150 years

Telling these stories from a road trip wouldn't be possible without the complex infrastructure of a mobile network, so I met with Peter Borsos, Head of Communications at Ericsson, in Washington, D.C., to talk about the company's 150-year history - 120 of those making a Swedish footprint in the United States, surviving both financial crashes and international bribery scandals - and how leaving the battle of smart phones transformed the company into one of the world's most trusted manufacturers of mobile infrastructure with 60 % of the American market. - And about speed! 6G is coming to our lives soon, and the big question is, how much more speed do we need before we’re satisfied?

16 de jun de 202633 min