Sights and Sounds of IDF in Beijing

The Intel Developer Forum in Beijing gave us an opportunity to see how businesses, tech developers and people are working with Intel. This is a fun, visual romp through Beijing and the Intel Technology showcase during the week of April 16, 2007. Intel commissioned PodTech’s Jason Lopez to capture the buzz and his personal experience. This is not about specific products or announcements. It’s about people getting together and changing the world.

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Mainstream and New Media Meet, But at What Cost?

The Virginia Tech killings showed how mainstream and social media, like the social networking site Facebook, are fitting together to cover news that has a broad audience.  It also reveals a major divide between those embracing technology and those who are trying to first understand it better.  We need both.  San Francisco Chronicle writer Joe Garofoli on April 20, 2007 wrote:  “The questions and concerns about the boundaries of openness are being raised not just by traditional media fuddy-duddies but by leaders of new media, those who often praise the virtues of a “democratized” media world in which anyone can publish his own writing, video or photos.” 

There is a lot of learning ahead of us – ethics, potentially dangerous uses – but there’s no need to reinvent the wheel.  Rather, many are building on lessons learned from the printing press, birth of radio, TV, cable, Internet and now the people at-large who are media producers and worldwide distributors news, information and babble.  Garofoli shows the audience for Fox and CNN on Tuesday, April 17:

  • The 1.8 million people who watched Fox on Monday, the day the shooting occurred, represented a 115 percent jump in ratings over Fox’s average for the first part of this year.

  • CNN’s 1.4 million viewers were a ratings jump of 186 percent for that same period. MSNBC.com had 108.8 million page views Tuesday, a record for the site.

Garofoli provides a variety of soundbites that show how different people and professions are looking at this.  Reading some of these (pasted below), I get the sense that many people are not watching primetime TV shows like CSI, Law&Order and other crime-themed programs.  These shows explore many of the ethical and potentially harmful possibilities that come from a society living with more technology-powered capabilities than ever before.  Most of the storylines may seem fear or protectionist-based, but they allow us to explore possibilities. 

  • Jeff Jarvis wrote on his BuzzMachine.com blog, “There is no control point anymore. When anyone and everyone — witnesses, criminals, victims, commentators, officials and journalists — can publish and broadcast as events happen, there is no longer any guarantee that news and society itself can be filtered, packaged, edited, sanitized, polished, secured.”

  • “It is future shock,” said Micah Sifry, executive editor of the Personal Democracy Forum, a
    New York think-tank that explores the intersections of technology and politics. “The technology has developed so fast that the culture hasn’t caught up with all of it. On one hand, you have the advocates, who want NBC to release all of (Cho’s manifesto). On the other, you have people who are saying, ‘Wait a minute.’ This is a very challenging moment. What works best is an open-networked system. It’s the difference between trusting a few people to make decisions for everyone and trusting many people.”

  • “Conflicted is the right word,” said Dave Winer, a pioneering blogger and influential figure in new media. “Yes, I realize that it’s unfortunate right now that this guy gets to control the discussion. We hadn’t foreseen this use of the technology because, as utopians, we tend to look for the good stuff. I liked to think I had a balanced view, and could see where bloggers weren’t doing good, but I hadn’t seriously considered our tools used to further such a bad cause.   

  • “The lesson for this week is that the news is everywhere. The news is on Facebook,” said Jennifer Sizemore, editor in chief of MSNBC.com. Like other news outlets, MSNBC turned to social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook to find students to interview about the Virginia Tech slayings.  “I don’t view them as the competition,” said Sizemore. “I see them as enlarging the conversation.”

  • “In the end, it’s going to get out there,” said Jay Wallace, executive producer for news at Fox News Channel. “Even if every newspaper and cable news channel doesn’t put it out there, somebody will.  In those early hours, it is a feeding frenzy. We know that people are flipping around everywhere for news.” 

People who are keenly interested will flip through TV, Radio and the Internet, where social media sites offer insight into people’s daily lives.  Sometimes people are flipping through all of these at the same time.

We have more people participating than ever, and lots of interesting viewpoints on how we can move ahead in our rapidly changing, technology-driven, new media-filled lives.  PodTech’s Rio Pesino talks with a good collection of mainstream and new media pros in this vidoe mashup where he asks, “What’s missing form local media?”

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IDF Beijing: Doing More with Less

Here two Fathers of Intel Developer Forum — Pat Gelsinger and Justin Rattner — talk about the core of what’s to come…through research and development and the area where most new technology first hits, the enterprise market.

Listening to this I keep hearing Robert DeNiro saying, “enthusiasmzz…enthusiasmzzz.”

Scaling up in chip performance and manufacturing capabilities, while scaling down energy consumption.

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IDF Beijing: Dadi Perlmutter on Mobility

Here is Intel’s mobile PC vision shared with developers in Beijing this week. This gives us the latest context for the upcoming release of the laptop upgrade — a collection of the latest energy-efficient processor, chipset for HD capabilities, wireless and some interesting new memory technology.

We get vision here, but it’ll take the help of many who will advance Wi-Fi and WiMAX wireless services that let laptops and mobile devices to connect easily and inexpensively to the high-speed Internet.

We’ve seen lots of WiMAX demos — at Sundance, at Iron Man in Hawaii and countries outside of the U.S. It’s happenin’!

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Latest in Online Video Ads from Brightroll

Robert Scoble talks with Tod Sacerdoti, CEO of Brightrool. Interesting to see how ads, messages and “more info” can be placed inside videos for the Internet. Ads at the end are not bothersome, but pre-rolls can be frustrating when you want to quickly get to the story you’re interested. I’d like to see how “more info” can be embedded into video while it’s playing. If I’m interested, I can pause the video, click a link and a new browser pops up. When I’m done “learning more” I can close the extra browser and get back to the video by clicking play. Sounds very cool! Sound like an open frontier and opportunities for video producers, advertizers and storytellers who want to offer deeper info or more video that may have ended up on “the cutting room floor.”

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Intel Core Processor Challenge: Then There Were Two

This is a fun video PodTech did for the Intel PC Design People’s Choice Awards.  This shows the final round of judging.  It doesn’t point out the winners of the industry $1 million Intel Core Processor Challenge, as that announcement just came out from the Intel Developer Forum in
Beijing.

 

Now we know that TriGem Computer Inc. from Korea was awarded the Core Processor Challenge grand prize for its three tall yet slender-towered Lluon “Black Crystal” home theater design — and Asono from Norway was picked as runner-up for its minimalist “Merium” system.  

Meantime, BICOM, mCubed, and SlipperySkip are battling to the finish with only a few days of voting left in the sepate, tandem PC Design People’s Choice Awards competition going on until April 20.

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Social Networking is Like Air Says Market Guru Charlene Li

Forrester Research’s Charleen Li talks with PodTech’s Jennifer Jones. I first heard Li speak at a small gathering in 2005. She was on a panel along with Tom Foremski and a rep from AP. The panel was hosted by TheNewsMarket and explored online digital video and the trend of people are getting more information online thanks to new/social media.

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Anything Goes vs. Civility Enforced

Late night rambling after a watching a great vloggies episode.

As someone who works for a publically owned company, I see the debate on blog codes of conduct as nothing new. It actually offers a chance for every to say who they are and who they want to be. Not having guidelines says you’re the type that likes to be free of “rules” — that’s me! But even without explicit rules, I still treat people with respect and interest. Yet human nature also includes being combatitive, defensive, jealous, vendictive… Maybe we all have our own rules which reflect our tastes and preferences.

If the investors own the company and the company is spending money to allow blogging — internally or externally — it seems important to outline the intentions of the blog. Intended uses and what it is not intended for. Seems things can stay pretty open, but a company does a services to its bloggers, readers and investers when it clearly defines what are its tastes and preferences. Guidelines are bad or evil. They can be limiting, stifling at times, or they can become a foundation for greatness. The Bill of Rights are the Constitution might be considered good examples. I’m sure there are way more bad examples, and there are even examples of guidelines that we never know or hear about. The latter probably serve us all the best.

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Who’s the Scoble of China? New Intel Blog Live from Beijing IDF

Intel’s Stacy English and Bryan Rhoads talks about how Intel’s new blog Technology@Intel will play a big role at the Intel Devleoper Forum in Beijing this week.

In addition to a team of Intel pros, we might even see some special guests post to the blog from Beijing.

We’ll also see how some of our stories can come together thanks to social media technology.

For TV and Radio reporters, we always call IDF the ultimate geekfest. It really is, and I’m curious to see how social media can help the ultimate geekfest reach any interested person who is curious about the future of technology.

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Being There — Jeremiah Owyang Live UStreaming from Web 2.0 Expo

Man on the move Jeremiah Owyang is doing his verison of Justin.TV, but with a very appropriate business twist.  He will be presenting at the popular Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco this week (April 16-18).  If you’re there, check him out.  Unable to go?  Next best thing to being there is tapping in to the live Web video stream of Jeremiah in action at Web 2.0.  Here’s an embedded player from Ustream.TV:

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